We can have quadratic inequalities in one or two variables.
We can solve quadratic inequalities in one variable by solving the related equation and then determining which of the intervals on the number line represent the solutions.
The end points will be unfilled if the inequality is < or > and filled if the inequality is \leq or \geq. The interval(s) that will be included depend on the direction of the inequality. For example, x^2<9 gives:
while x^2 \geq 9 gives:
We can visualize where these solution sets come from by considering the graph of the corresponding quadratic equation. For example:
Notice that the end points of the solution set are the x-intercepts of the corresponding quadratic equation.
Another method for finding the solution set is to change the inequality symbol into an equals symbol to get the related equation. We can then solve the related equation to find our end points, then test values on either side of the end points to find where the inequality is true.
For example, with the equality x^2<9 we can consider the equation x^2=9. We can solve this to get the end points x=3 and x=-3. Plotting these points on the number line shows us that there are three regions we need to test.
We can test each region by substituting a value from the region into the inequality and checking if the result is true or false.
(4)^2<9 is false, so we know that the region greater than 3 is not part of the solution set.
(0)^2<9 is true, so we know that the region between 3 and -3 is part of the solution set.
(-4)^2<9 is false, so we know that the region less than -3 is not part of the solution set.
Therefore the solution set for the quadratic inequality x^2<9 is:
Graph the inequality x^2-2x-15<0 on a number line.
Graph the corresponding quadratic function and solve each of the following inequalities.
x^2-4 \leq 0
0 < \left(x-5\right)\left(x+1\right)
Write a corresponding quadratic inequality for the given solution set on the number line.