Solution 2.3:6b

From Förberedande kurs i matematik 1

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Current revision (11:34, 29 September 2008) (edit) (undo)
m
 
Line 1: Line 1:
By completing the square, the second degree polynomial can be rewritten as a quadratic plus a constant, and then it is relatively straightforward to read off the expression's minimum value,
By completing the square, the second degree polynomial can be rewritten as a quadratic plus a constant, and then it is relatively straightforward to read off the expression's minimum value,
 +
{{Displayed math||<math>x^{2}-4x+2 = (x-2)^{2}-2^{2}+2 = (x-2)^{2}-2\,\textrm{.}</math>}}
-
<math>x^{2}-4x+2=\left( x-2 \right)^{2}-2^{2}+2=\left( x-2 \right)^{2}-2</math>
+
Because <math>(x-2)^{2}</math> is a quadratic, this term is always larger than or equal to 0 and the whole expression is therefore at least equal to -2, which occurs when <math>x-2=0</math> and the quadratic is zero, i.e. <math>x=2</math>.
-
 
+
-
 
+
-
Because
+
-
<math>\left( x-2 \right)^{2}</math>
+
-
is a quadratic, this term is always larger than or equal to
+
-
<math>0</math>
+
-
and the whole expression is therefore at least equal to
+
-
<math>-\text{2}</math>, which occurs when
+
-
<math>x-\text{2}=0\text{ }</math>
+
-
and the quadratic is zero, i.e.
+
-
<math>x=\text{2}</math>.
+

Current revision

By completing the square, the second degree polynomial can be rewritten as a quadratic plus a constant, and then it is relatively straightforward to read off the expression's minimum value,

\displaystyle x^{2}-4x+2 = (x-2)^{2}-2^{2}+2 = (x-2)^{2}-2\,\textrm{.}

Because \displaystyle (x-2)^{2} is a quadratic, this term is always larger than or equal to 0 and the whole expression is therefore at least equal to -2, which occurs when \displaystyle x-2=0 and the quadratic is zero, i.e. \displaystyle x=2.