McGraw Hill Integrated II, 2012
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McGraw Hill Integrated II, 2012 View details
5. Solving Quadratic Equations by Using the Quadratic Formula
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Exercise 36 Page 137

The discriminant of a quadratic equation is b^2-4ac.

Discriminant: - 135
Number of Real Solutions: Zero

Practice makes perfect
We want to use the discriminant of the given quadratic equation to determine the number of real solutions. In the Quadratic Formula, b^2-4ac is the discriminant. ax^2+bx+c=0 ⇕ x=- b±sqrt(b^2-4ac)/2aIf we just want to know the number of real solutions, and not the solutions themselves, we only need to work with the discriminant. Since we have the equation in standard form, we can identify the values of a, b, and c. 2x^2 - 5x + 20 = 0 ⇕ 2x^2+( -5)x+ 20=0 Finally, let's evaluate the discriminant.
b^2-4ac
( - 5)^2-4( 2)( 20)
â–Ľ
Simplify
5^2 - 4(2)(20)
25 - 4(2)(20)
25 - 8(20)
25 - 160
- 135
Since the discriminant is - 135, the quadratic equation has no real solutions.

Extra

Further information
If the discriminant is greater than zero, the equation will have two real solutions. If it is equal to zero, the equation will have one real solution. Finally, if the discriminant is less than zero, the equation will have no real solutions.