James Tanton’s Quadratics Solver
Solve the quadratic equation
Step 1: First we have to ensure that the
If we multiply the entire equation by {{disp(ax)}}, we get
We can already factorise
Step 2: Next, we have to check that the
We multiply the entire equation by 4 (not 2), to ensure that the first term remains a perfect square. Now we have
We can also fill in the remaining cells in the table.
Step 3: Finally, we have to ensure that the third term matches the value in the
If we add {{disp(cx)}} to both sides of the equation, we get
Step 4: The left-hand side of the equation is now a perfect square. We can read off the factorised version from the diagram:
Step 5: Finally, we can take square roots of both sides. Remember to add a ± sign on the right-hand side:
Step 6: All that is left is to clean up the equation, and isolate x:
There is only one solution:
Since we can’t take square roots of negative numbers, this equation doesn’t have any (real) solutions.
The two correct solutions are