Rational roots of a polynomial (1 Viewer)

undalay

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shaon0 said:
So i would have to prove it on a HSC paper. Ok thanks.
they can have heaps of lead on parts specifying any method; memorising one is not recommended
 

tommykins

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回复: Re: Rational roots of a polynomial

the method they gave was integrating t.e^-t or something a rather.
 

vds700

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Re: 回复: Re: Rational roots of a polynomial

tommykins said:
the method they gave was integrating t.e^-t or something a rather.
whats this for?
 

midifile

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undalay said:
no im saying for that equation is cant be fractions (show me a monic polynomial with integer coefficients that has fraction roots) .
Obviously fractions are rational.

Any my post wasn't meant to be a proof, rather its suppose to stimulate thoughts/intuition.
proofs are lameee.
Yea i get what you mean. I thought you were saying that rational rots couldnt be fractions [i didnt actually read the question].
 

shaon0

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Re: 回复: Re: Rational roots of a polynomial

tommykins said:
Proof of e's irrationality.
I saw a proof that used infintie series by Joseph Fourier. But it was quite short.
Are we allowed to produce a proof like that for 4unit HSC?
Question: In integration if you get a value pi to substitute into cosx or sinx do we change pi into 180 degrees?
 
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vds700

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Re: 回复: Re: Rational roots of a polynomial

shaon0 said:
I saw a proof that used infintie series by Joseph Fourier. But it was quite short.
Are we allowed to produce a proof like that for 4unit HSC?
Question: In integration if you get a value pi to substitute into cosx or sinx do we change pi into 180 degrees?
pi is 180 degrees, but its best to leave it in radians.

Its pretty easy, all u need to know is

sin(pi) = 0
cos(pi) = -1
 

Iruka

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I doubt you would be asked to use Fourier series to prove the irrationality of pi.

I think the irrationality proof for e that you are talking about used the Taylor series expansion for the exponential function.

When doing calculus, you should always assume that angles are measured in radians.
 

AMorris

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undalay said:
no im saying for that equation is cant be fractions (show me a monic polynomial with integer coefficients that has fraction roots) .
Obviously fractions are rational.

Any my post wasn't meant to be a proof, rather its suppose to stimulate thoughts/intuition.
proofs are lameee.
but why is it obvious that a monic polynomial can't have a non-integer rational root? The only way I can think of proving that is by my method where you show that q has to be +-1?
 

shaon0

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Re: 回复: Re: Rational roots of a polynomial

vds700 said:
pi is 180 degrees, but its best to leave it in radians.

Its pretty easy, all u need to know is

sin(pi) = 0
cos(pi) = -1
then, why does sin(pi)=0.0548.... and cos(pi)=0.9985.... instead of sin(pi)=sin(180)=0 and cos(pi)=cos(180)=1?
 

shaon0

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Iruka said:
I doubt you would be asked to use Fourier series to prove the irrationality of pi.

I think the irrationality proof for e that you are talking about used the Taylor series expansion for the exponential function.

When doing calculus, you should always assume that angles are measured in radians.
Sorry for my mistake.
 

Templar

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shaon0 said:
then, why does sin(pi)=0.0548.... and cos(pi)=0.9985.... instead of sin(pi)=sin(180)=0 and cos(pi)=cos(180)=1?
Changing your calculator to radian mode would give the required answer.

AMorris said:
but why is it obvious that a monic polynomial can't have a non-integer rational root? The only way I can think of proving that is by my method where you show that q has to be +-1?
If (x-p/q) is a solution you could deduce that (qx-p) is a factor of the polynomial.
 
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shaon0

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Templar said:
Changing your calculator to radian mode would give the required answer.



If (x-p/q) is a solution you could deduce that (qx-p) is a factor of the polynomial.
thanks for the advice.
 

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