Recall that to find the \(x\)-intercepts of a function \(f(x)\text{,}\) we need to find the values of \(x\) that make \(f(x)=0\text{.}\) We saw in SectionΒ 1.5 that the zero product property (DefinitionΒ 1.5.3) was helpful when \(f(x)\) is a polynomial that we can factor. Letβs consider how we approach polynomials which are not in factored form or easily factorable.
If we know one zero, then we can divide by \(x-a\) where \(a\) is a zero. After this, the quotient will have smaller degree and we can work on factoring the rest. We can βchip awayβ at the polynomial one zero at a time.
We already know from ActivityΒ 4.5.4 that \(x-3\) is a factor of the polynomial \(f(x)\text{.}\) Use division to express \(f(x)\) as \((x-3)\cdot q(x)\text{,}\) where \(q(x)\) is a quadratic function.
We were able to find all the zeros of the polynomial in ActivityΒ 4.5.7 because we were given one of the zeros. If we donβt have a zero to help us get started (or need more than one zero for a function of higher degree), we have a couple of options.
Now use these zeros along with polynomial division to rewrite the function as \(f(x)=(x-a)(x-b)q(x)\) where \(a\) and \(b\) are zeros and \(q(x)\) is the remaining quadratic function.
In ActivityΒ 4.5.11 we found that the roots were both factors of the constant term divided by factors of the leading coefficient. This can be extended to polynomials of larger degree.
If a polynomial \(p(x)=a_nx^n+x_{n-1}x^{n-1}+\cdots +a_1x+a_0 \) has integer coefficients, then the rational zeros have the form \(\dfrac{p}{q}\) where \(p\) is a factor of the constant term \(a_0\) and \(q\) is a factor of the leading coefficient \(a_n\text{.}\)
Let \(p(x)\) be a polynomial function with real coefficients. If \(a+bi\) is a complex zero of the function, then the conjugate \(a-bi\) is also a zero of the function. These two zeroes are called conjugate zeros, or a conjugate pair of zeros.