Answer:
1 real
Step-by-step explanation:
The discriminant is:
which comes from the quadratic formula.
The rules are:
If the discriminant is > 0, there are 2 real solutions
If the discriminant is = 0, there is 1 real solution
If the discriminant is < 0, there are 2 imaginary solutions
(there are 2 other situations involving square roots, but these are the most basic ones in Algebra 2 books when you study quadratics)
First, we have to get that quadratic in standard form, which means getting everything on one side of the equals sign and setting it equal to 0:
where a = 1, b = 4, c = 4
Filling in the discriminant:
gives us
16 - 16 = 0
Therefore, our quadratic has one real solution. Factor it and see if you'd like, to prove that it is true.