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synthetic zerØ In a time of deep planetary weirding and widespread cultural and personal disorientation speculative thought is no longer just a literary genre or theoretical exercise, but a vital tool for creative […]
synthetic zero Weblog about art, philosophy, architecture (in the broad sense), science, Internet, technology; postmodern and post-postmodern musings
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Rational Roots and Synthetic Division - Justin Skycak The zeros of the polynomial would be just −2 − 2 and −1 − 1, and the fully factored form of the polynomial would be (x + 2)(x + 1)(x2 + 7) (x + 2) (x + 1) (x 2 + 7) One last thing about synthetic division: be sure to include ALL coefficients of the original polynomial in the top row of the synthetic division setup, even if they are 0 0
Zeros of a Polynomial Function - Alamo Colleges District Possible Zeros: List all possible rational zeros using the Rational Zeros Theorem Divide: Use Synthetic division to evaluate the polynomial at each of the candidates for rational zeros that you found in Step 1 When the remainder is 0, note the quotient you have obtained Repeat: Repeat Steps 1 and 2 for the quotient