I CAN USE LONG DIVISION AND SYNTHETIC DIVISION. I CAN APPLY THE FACTOR AND REMAINDER THEOREMS. Lesson 2-3 The Remainder and Factor Theorems.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Remainder and Factor Theorems
Advertisements

Dividing Polynomials Objectives
Dividing Polynomials Section 2.4. Objectives Divide two polynomials using either long division or synthetic division. Use the Factor Theorem to show that.
Long Division of Polynomials
5.5 Apply the Remainder and Factor Theorem
2.2 Remainder and Factor Theorems 1 Remainder Theorem If the polynomial f(x) is divided by x  c, then the remainder is equal to f(c). In other words,
Dividing Polynomials Intro - Chapter 4.1. Using Long Division Example 1: Dividing Polynomials DIVISOR DIVIDEND REMAINDER QUOTIENT.
Warm Up #1 1. Use synthetic substitution to evaluate f (x) = x3 + x2 – 3x – 10 when x = – ANSWER –4.
Daily Warm-UP Quiz Factor completely: 1. x 4 – 17x x x x 4 – 7x x 8 – x 6 – x 6 – 36.
6.8 Synthetic Division. Polynomial Division, Factors, and Remainders In this section, we will look at two methods to divide polynomials: long division.
Lesson 2.4, page 301 Dividing Polynomials Objective: To divide polynomials using long and synthetic division, and to use the remainder and factor theorems.
Division and Factors When we divide one polynomial by another, we obtain a quotient and a remainder. If the remainder is 0, then the divisor is a factor.
Polynomial Division, Factors, and Remainders ©2001 by R. Villar All Rights Reserved.
Dividing Polynomials 6-3 Warm Up Lesson Presentation Lesson Quiz
5.4 – Apply the Remainder and Factor Theorems Divide 247 / / 8.
Lesson 2.3 Real Zeros of Polynomials. The Division Algorithm.
6.5 The Remainder and Factor Theorems p. 352 How do you divide polynomials? What is the remainder theorem? What is the difference between synthetic substitution.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. CHAPTER 4: Polynomial and Rational Functions 4.1 Polynomial Functions and Models 4.2 Graphing Polynomial Functions.
1 What we will learn today…  How to divide polynomials and relate the result to the remainder and factor theorems  How to use polynomial division.
 PERFORM LONG DIVISION WITH POLYNOMIALS AND DETERMINE WHETHER ONE POLYNOMIAL IS A FACTOR OF ANOTHER.  USE SYNTHETIC DIVISION TO DIVIDE A POLYNOMIAL BY.
Algebraic long division Divide 2x³ + 3x² - x + 1 by x + 2 x + 2 is the divisor The quotient will be here. 2x³ + 3x² - x + 1 is the dividend.
The Remainder and Factor Theorems
Objective Use long division and synthetic division to divide polynomials.
UNIT 2 – QUADRATIC, POLYNOMIAL, AND RADICAL EQUATIONS AND INEQUALITIES Chapter 6 – Polynomial Functions 6.7 – The Remainder and Factor Theorems.
Section 2.4 Dividing Polynomials; The Factor and Remainder Theorems.
2.3 Polynomial Division and Synthetic Division Ex. Long Division What times x equals 6x 3 ? 6x 2 6x x 2 Change the signs and add x x.
6.5 The Remainder and Factor Theorems
4-3 The Remainder and Factor Theorems
quotient is x + 6 and remainder is quotient is x.
Factor Theorem Using Long Division, Synthetic Division, & Factoring to Solve Polynomials.
Using theorems to factor polynomials.  If a polynomial f(x) is divided by x-k, then the remainder r = f(k)  This is saying, when you divide (using synthetic.
Five-Minute Check (over Lesson 2-2) Then/Now New Vocabulary
Synthetic Division and Zeros. Synthetic division Only applies when the divisor is x-c and when every descending power of x has a place in the dividend.
Division of Polynomials Digital Lesson. Copyright © by Houghton Mifflin Company, Inc. All rights reserved. 2 Dividing Polynomials Long division of polynomials.
Polynomial & Synthetic Division Algebra III, Sec. 2.3 Objective Use long division and synthetic division to divide polynomials by other polynomials.
a. b.  To simplify this process, we can use a process called division.  Synthetic division works when dividing a polynomial by.  To get started, make.
Quotient Dividend Remainder Divisor Long Division.
Division of Polynomials Digital Lesson. Copyright © by Houghton Mifflin Company, Inc. All rights reserved. 2 Dividing Polynomials Long division of polynomials.
Polynomial and Synthetic Division Objective: To solve polynomial equations by long division and synthetic division.
Section 4.3 Polynomial Division; The Remainder and Factor Theorems Copyright ©2013, 2009, 2006, 2001 Pearson Education, Inc.
Holt Algebra Dividing Polynomials Synthetic division is a shorthand method of dividing a polynomial by a linear binomial by using only the coefficients.
Then/Now You factored quadratic expressions to solve equations. (Lesson 0–3) Divide polynomials using long division and synthetic division. Use the Remainder.
Polynomial Long Division
Chapter 2 – Polynomial and Rational Functions 2.3 – Real Zeros of Polynomial Functions.
Polynomial & Synthetic Division Algebra III, Sec. 2.3 Objective Use long division and synthetic division to divide polynomials by other polynomials.
3.2 Division of Polynomials. Remember this? Synthetic Division 1. The divisor must be a binomial. 2. The divisor must be linear (degree = 1) 3. The.
Objective Use long division and synthetic division to divide polynomials.
Warm Up Divide using long division ÷ ÷
Dividing Polynomials Section 4.3.
Warm Up Compute the following by using long division.
Section 5.4 – Dividing Polynomials
Do Now  .
Division of a Polynomial
The Remainder and Factor Theorems
Dividing Polynomials Long Division A little review:
DIVIDING POLYNOMIALS Synthetically!
Dividing Polynomials.
Apply the Remainder and Factor Theorems
Polynomial Division; The Remainder Theorem and Factor Theorem
Objective Use long division and synthetic division to divide polynomials.
Dividing Polynomials 6-3 Warm Up Lesson Presentation Lesson Quiz
Warm-up: Divide using Long Division
5.5 - Long and Synthetic Division
Remainder and Factor Theorem
5.5 Apply the Remainder and Factor Theorems
Dividing Polynomials 6-3 Warm Up Lesson Presentation Lesson Quiz
The Remainder and Factor Theorems
Dividing Polynomials.
The Remainder and Factor Theorems
Work on example #1 in today’s packet.
Presentation transcript:

I CAN USE LONG DIVISION AND SYNTHETIC DIVISION. I CAN APPLY THE FACTOR AND REMAINDER THEOREMS. Lesson 2-3 The Remainder and Factor Theorems

Long Division First divide 325 by 14 to review the process. Answer: 23 remainder 3 or 23 and 3/14 Now divide 2x 2 - 7x + 8 by x – 2. Answer: 2x – 3 remainder 2 or (2x – 3) + 2/(x-2) Finally divide 3x 4 – 2x by x 2 – 1. (Note the missing terms.) Answer: 3x 2 – 2x + 3 remainder -2x + 5.

Review of Terms Dividend Divisor Remainder Quotient To check a problem, note that dividend = divisor x quotient + remainder If the remainder is zero, the divisor and quotient are factors of the dividend.

Synthetic Division This is a shortcut for dividing when the divisor is in the form x – a. Use synthetic division to divide 2x 2 – 7x + 8 by x – 2. Check to see that you get the same answer that you did using long division. Now divide x 3 + 5x 2 + 2x – 8 by x + 2. Answer: x 2 + 3x – 4 Can you use this answer to factor the function completely?

The Remainder Theorem First divide f(x) = 2x 2 – 3x + 4 by x -1 using synthetic division. Now find the f(1). What do you notice? Remainder Theorem When f(x) is divided by x-r, the remainder is f(r). To prove this for a quadratic, divide g(x) = ax 2 + bx + c by x – r using synthetic division. The remainder is ar 2 + br +c, which is f(r).

Factor Theorem Let f(x) = 2x 3 – 5x 2 + x – 6. a) Use the remainder theorem (also called synthetic substitution) to evaluate f(3). Can you see why this is easier than evaluating f(3) the “old” way? Answer f(3) = 6. b) Is x – 3 a factor of f(x)? No, because the remainder when diving by x – 3 is 6. Factor Theorem If f(x) is a polynomial function, f(r)=0 if and only if x – r is a factor of f(x).

Let f(x) = 2x 4 + x 3 – 11x 2 – 4x + 12 Is x + 2 a factor? Is x – 1 a factor? Factor f(x) as far as possible. Answer f(x) = (x+2)(x-1)(2x+3)(x-2)