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8.05 Solving quadratic equations using appropriate methods

Lesson

Concept summary

We have several methods we can use to solve quadratic equations. To determine which method is the most suitable we need to look at the form of the quadratic equation. Some are easily solved by factoring for example, or by taking the square root.

If we are unable to solve the quadratic easily using one of these methods, the quadratic formula is often the best approach since it can be used to solve any quadratic equation once it's written in standard form. If we have access to technology, drawing the graph of the corresponding quadratic function can help us find exact solutions or approximate a solution if it is not an integer value.

Worked examples

Example 1

For the following quadratic equations, find the solution using an efficient method. Justify which method you used.

a

x^2-7x+12=0

Approach

The leading coefficient of x^2 is 1, so we can check if this can be easily factored. The prime factors of 12 are \pm 1,\, \pm 2,\, \pm3,\,\pm4,\, \pm6,\, \pm 12, and we want to find two factors that have a product of 12 and sum to -7. As the product is positive but the sum is negative we know both factors must be negative.

Solution

The two factors that have a product of 12 and a sum of -7 are -3 and -4. We can write the equation in factored form as \left(x-4\right)\left(x-3\right)=0, which gives us two solutions x=3,\, x=4.

Reflection

In general, if the coefficients are small, and especially if a=1, it is worth checking to see if we can easily factor the equation to solve.

b

x^2-6=21

Approach

Here we have b=0, and can easily isolate the x^2, which means we can solve this by using square roots.

Solution

\displaystyle x^2-6\displaystyle =\displaystyle 21
\displaystyle x^2\displaystyle =\displaystyle 27Add 6
\displaystyle x\displaystyle =\displaystyle \pm \sqrt{27}Square root

x=\pm \sqrt{27} giving us two solutions x \approx 5.196, x \approx -5.196

Reflection

In general, if we can easily rearrange the equation into the form \left(x-h\right)^2=k for some positive value of k then solving using square roots is a suitable method.

Example 2

A rectangular enclosure is to be constructed from 100 meters of wooden fencing. The area of the enclosure is given by A = 50 x - x^{2}, where x is the length of one side of the rectangle. If the area is 525 m^2, determine the side lengths.

Approach

We can set up and solve a quadratic equation, 50x-x^{2}=525. Since the values are large we will try solving this problem with the quadratic formula. The two solutions will be the side lengths of the enclosure.

Solution

Rearranging the equation into standard form we get x^2-50x+525=0.

We can solve this using the quadratic equation:

1\displaystyle x\displaystyle =\displaystyle \dfrac{-b \pm \sqrt{b^2-4ac}}{2a}Quadratic formula
2\displaystyle x\displaystyle =\displaystyle \dfrac{-\left(-50\right) \pm \sqrt{\left(-50\right)^2-4\left(1\right)\left(525\right)}}{2\left(1\right)}Substitute values for a,b,c
3\displaystyle x\displaystyle =\displaystyle \dfrac{50 \pm \sqrt{400}}{2}Simplify
4\displaystyle x\displaystyle =\displaystyle \dfrac{50 \pm 20}{2}Evaluate the square root

This leaves us with two values, x=\dfrac{50+20}{2} and x=\dfrac{50-20}{2}. Evaluating each expression for x we get x=35 and x=15.

Reflection

We can confirm our answer is correct by checking the conditions of the problem. We had 100 meters of fencing and 2\left(35+15\right)=100. We needed the area to be 525 m^2 and 35\left(15\right)=525 as required.

Since there are two rational solutions, the quadratic equation was also factorable:

x^2-50x+525=\left(x-35\right)\left(x-15\right), but these factors are not immediately obvious.

Outcomes

A1.A.CED.A.1

Create equations and inequalities in one variable and use them to solve problems in a real-world context.*

A1.A.CED.A.2

Create equations in two variables to represent relationships between quantities and use them to solve problems in a real-world context. Graph equations with two variables on coordinate axes with labels and scales, and use the graphs to make predictions.*

A1.A.CED.A.3

Create individual and systems of equations and/or inequalities to represent constraints in a contextual situation, and interpret solutions as viable or non-viable.*

A1.A.REI.A.1

Understand solving equations as a process of reasoning and explain the reasoning. Construct a viable argument to justify a solution method.

A1.A.REI.B.3

Solve quadratic equations and inequalities in one variable.

A1.A.REI.B.3.A

Solve quadratic equations by inspection (e.g., for x^2 = 49), taking square roots, knowing and applying the quadratic formula, and factoring, as appropriate to the initial form of the equation. Recognize when a quadratic equation has solutions that are not real numbers.

A1.MP1

Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them.

A1.MP2

Reason abstractly and quantitatively.

A1.MP3

Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others.

A1.MP4

Model with mathematics.

A1.MP5

Use appropriate tools strategically.

A1.MP6

Attend to precision.

A1.MP7

Look for and make use of structure.

A1.MP8

Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning.

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