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Polynomial question! (1 Viewer)

YBK

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could anyone please help me out with this one:

P(x) has remainder x - 2 when divided by x^2 - 1
Find the remainder when P(x) is divided by x + 1

Well, I did:

P(x)/x^2+1= x - 2

then i got P(x) = (x^2 + 1) (x - 2)
and replaced x by -1 giving a remainder of 0

is this correct?

Thanks :)
 

robbo_145

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YBK said:
could anyone please help me out with this one:

P(x) has remainder x - 2 when divided by x^2 - 1
Find the remainder when P(x) is divided by x + 1

Well, I did:

P(x)/x^2+1= x - 2

then i got P(x) = (x^2 + 1) (x - 2)
and replaced x by -1 giving a remainder of 0

is this correct?

Thanks :)
P(x) = (x2-1)Q(x) + x - 2 where Q(x) is some other polynomial
P(-1) = 0 - 1 - 2
&there4; remainder = -3
 

YBK

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robbo_145 said:
P(x) = (x2-1)Q(x) + x - 2 where Q(x) is some other polynomial
P(-1) = 0 - 1 - 2
&there4; remainder = -3
Thank you!

I knew the way I did it was wrong.... i could just feel it :D
 

robbo_145

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haha thats alright, i see your doing your HSC next year so its okay :)

YBK said:
P(x)/x^2+1= x - 2
a few lines before my first to explain it a bit better

P(x)/(x2+1) = Q(x) + (x - 2)/(x2+1)
hence
P(x) = (x2+1)Q(x) + (x - 2)
 

YBK

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robbo_145 said:
haha thats alright, i see your doing your HSC next year so its okay :)



a few lines before my first to explain it a bit better

P(x)/(x2+1) = Q(x) + (x - 2)/(x2+1)
hence
P(x) = (x2+1)Q(x) + (x - 2)
yeah, that makes a lot of sense :)

Division transformation comes in handy... lol P(x) = D(x) . Q(x) + R(x)
 

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