The fundamental theorem of algebra states that a polynomial with degree n has at most n solutions. The "at most" depends on the fact that the solutions might not all be real number.
In fact, if you use complex number, then a polynomial with degree n has exactly n roots.
So, in particular, a third-degree polynomial can have at most 3 roots.
In fact, in general, if the polynomial has solutions , then you can factor it as
So, a third-degree polynomial can't have 4 (or more) solutions, because otherwise you could write it as
But this is a fourth-degree polynomial.
3x^2 + 8x - 4 - (6x^2 - 5x + 3)....distribute thru the parenthesis
3x^2 + 8x - 4 - 6x^2 + 5x - 3 .....combine like terms
-3x^2 + 13x - 7 <==
Answer:
what the picture?
Step-by-step explanation: