u r right. there r two turning pts, sub them back to the P(x), it must be:Originally posted by Affinity
here's a part of a question from my trials today which I believe to be incorrect:
P(x)= x^5 - 5cx + 1
Prove that for c > (1/4)^5, P(x) has 3 distinct real roots.
Any ideas?
When you have the two turning pts (say they're x1 and x2), for the curve to have 3 distinct roots, P(x1)*P(x2)<0. Just sub in and solve for C.Originally posted by Harimau
I suck... Can someone please post on how they got the value for C? I got the part about the two stationary points by myself, but couldnt go further than that.