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Could someone help me with this?
x³=6x+9
It doesn't seem difficult, but my answer doesn't suit to the answer in the book
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so basically x^3 - 6x - 9 = 0
We can factor out (x-3) from here, leaving
(x-3)(x^2+3*x+3) = 0
x-3 = 0, so x=3 is a solution
x^2 + 3x + 3 = 0
This can be solved easily using the quadratic formula
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thanx man, but I did it in another more complicated way.
x³-9-6x=0
(x³-27)+18-6x=0
(x-3)(x²+27x+27²)-6(x-3)=0
(x-3)(x²+27x+723)=0
x-3=0
x=3
and
x²+27x+723=0
D<0 no solutions
Now the answer is correct.
Could u explain me how you get this (x^2+3*x+3)?
Last edited by Rose-Red (2006-01-08 09:21:57)
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God factored out x-3 from the original equation. (x-3)(x²+3x+3) = x³-6x-9
I am at an age where I have forgotten more than I remember, but I still pretend to know it all.
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but i dont understand how it is possible. I cant find any rule or formula that allows to do that
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By the rational roots theorem, the only possible rational solutions are -9 -3 -1 1 3 and 9
By the rule of signs, there is one sign change, so there is a positive root, so start with positive numbers.
After finding that 3 is a root, we know that we can factor out (x-3)
Use synthetic division to find out the remaining quadratic:
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OMG I've never hear of that O_O
Thank you, I'll try to understand that and maybe use it later
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