12
Synthetic Division by x a
The remainder theorem
The factor theorem
IN ARITHMETIC we would write, for example,
or,
Equivalently,
47 = 9· 5 + 2
5 is called the divisor, 47 is the dividend, 9 is the quotient, and 2 is the remainder.
Dividend Divisor |
= Quotient + |
Remainder Divisor |
Or,
Dividend = Quotient· Divisor + Remainder.
In algebra, if we divide a polynomial P(x) by a polynomial D(x) (where the degree of D is less than the degree of P), we would find
P(x) = Q(x)· D(x) + R(x).
P(x) is the dividend, Q(x) is the quotient, and R(x) is the remainder.
For example, if, by long division, we divided
x³ − 5x² + 3 x − 7 by x − 2,
we would find
x − 2 |
= |
x² − 3x − 3 − |
13 x − 2 |
Or,
= (x² − 3x − 3)(x − 2) − 13.
x3 − 5x² + 3x − 7 is the dividend, x² − 3x −3 is the quotient, and −13 is the remainder.
Here is how to do this problem by synthetic division.
First, to use synthetic division, the divisor must be of the first degree and must have the form x − a. In this example, the divisor is x − 2, with a = 2.
Here again is the problem:
x − 2 |
Proceed as follows:
1. Write the coefficients of the dividend:
1 − 5 + 3 − 7
2. Put a, in this case 2, in a box to the right, leave a space, and draw a
2. line:
3. Bring down the leading coefficient (1), multiply it with a (2), and
3. write that product (1· 2) in the second column:
4. Add:
5. Repeat the process. −3· 2 = −6. And so on, until all the coefficients
5. have been exhausted.
The first three numbers, 1 − 3 − 3, are the coefficients of the quotient, and the final number, −13, is the remainder.
We have
x³ − 5x² + 3 x − 7 = (x² − 3x −3)(x − 2) − 13.
Example 1. Use synthetic division to divide
2x5 + 3x4 + 25x² − 1 by x + 3.
Solution. There are a couple of points here. First, we must account for all six coefficients of the general form.
2 + 3 + 0 + 25 + 0 − 1
The coefficient of x³ is 0, as is the coefficient of x.
Next, the divisor is x + 3. But the divisor must have the form x − a.
x + 3 = x − (−3).
Therefore, a = −3.
Here is the synthetic division:
This tells us
x + 3 |
= |
2x4 − 3x³ + 9x² − 2x + 6 − |
19 x + 3 |
Or,
2x5 + 3x4 + 25x² − 1 |
= |
(2x4 − 3x³ + 9x² − 2x + 6)(x + 3) − 19. |
|
Dividend |
= |
Quotient· Divisor + Remainder. |
Note: The degree of the quotient is one less than the degree of the dividend. And the degree of the remainder is less than the degree of the divisor, x + 3, which in this case is 1. The remainder therefore is of degree 0, which is a number.
In general, if we divide a polynomial of degree n by a polynomial of degree 1, then the degree of the quotient will be n − 1. And the remainder will be a number.
Problem 1. Use synthetic division to divide
x3 − 8x2 + x + 2 by x − 7.
Write your answer in the form
P(x) = Q(x)· D(x) + R.
To see the answer, pass your mouse over the colored area. To cover the answer again, click "Refresh" ("Reload").
x3 − 8x2 + x + 2 = (x² − x − 6)(x − 7) − 40
The remainder theorem
The value of a polynomial P(x) at x = a, is equal to the remainder upon dividing P(x) by x − a.
That is, when
P(x) = Q(x)(x − a) + R,
where Q(x) is the quotient and R is the remainder, then
P(a) = R.
For,
P(a) |
= |
Q(a)(a − a) + R |
|
|
= |
Q(a)· 0 + R |
|
|
= |
0 + R |
|
|
= |
R. |
Example 2. The Factor Theorem. Let f(x) = x³ − 3x² − 13x + 15.
We will use synthetic division to divide f(x) by x + 4.
Now, what does the remainder theorem tell us?
The value of f(x) at x = −4, is equal to the remainder:
f(−4) = −45.
Now let us divide f(x) by x − 5:
What does the remainder theorem tell us here?
f(5) = 0.
But this means that 5 is a root of f(x)!
Moreover, since the remainder is 0 -- there is no remainder -- then (x − 5) is a factor of f(x). The synthetic division shows:
x³ − 3x² − 13x + 15 = (x² + 2x − 3)(x − 5)
This illustrates the Factor Theorem:
The Factor Theorem. x − r is a factor of a polynomial P(x) if and only if r is a root of P(x).
Problem 2. Let f(x) = x³ − 5x² − 4x + 7. Use synthetic division to divide f(x) by x − 7.
Therefore, according to the remainder theorem,
f(7) = 77.
Problem 3. Let g(x) = 3x 4 + 17x³ + 16x ² − 10x + 4. Use synthetic division to divide g(x) by x + 2.
According to the remainder theorem,
g(−2) = 0.
Therefore, what do you conclude about −2?
−2 is a root of g(x).
What do you conclude about (x + 2)?
(x + 2) is a factor of g(x).
Problem 4. Use synthetic division to divide
x3 + 125 by x + 5.
x3 + 125 = (x² − 5x + 25)(x + 5)
Next Topic: Roots of polynomials
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