1. 22
2.34
3. first one
hope this helps
11. Factoring and solving equations
- A. Factor-
1. Factor 3x2 + 6x if possible.
Look for monomial (single-term) factors first; 3 is a factor of both 3x2
and 6x and so is x . Factor them out to get
3x2 + 6x = 3(x2 + 2x1 = 3x(x+ 2) .
2. Factor x2 + x - 6 if possible.
Here we have no common monomial factors. To get the x2 term
we'll have the form (x +-)(x +-) . Since
(x+A)(x+B) = x2 + (A+B)x + AB ,
we need two numbers A and B whose sum is 1 and whose product is
-6 . Integer possibilities that will give a product of -6 are
-6 and 1, 6 and -1, -3 and 2, 3 and -2.
The only pair whose sum is 1 is (3 and -2) , so the factorization is
x2 + x - 6 = (x+3)(x-2) .
3. Factor 4x2 - 3x - 10 if possible.
Because of the 4x2 term the factored form wli be either
(4x+A)(x +B) or (2x+A)(2x+B) . Because of the -10 the integer possibilities
for the pair A, B are
10 and -1 , -10 and 1 , 5 and -2 . -5 and 2 , plus each of
these in reversed order.
Check the various possibilities by trial and error. It may help to write
out the expansions
(4x + A)(x+ B) = 4x2 + (4B+A)x + A8
1 trying to get -3 here
(2x+A)(2x+B) = 4x2 + (2B+ 2A)x + AB
Trial and error gives the factorization 4x2 - 3x - 10 - (4x+5)(x- 2) .
4. Difference of two squares. Since (A + B)(A - B) = - B~ , any
expression of the form A' - B' can be factored. Note that A and B
might be anything at all.
Examples: 9x2 - 16 = (3x1' - 4' = (3x +4)(3x - 4)
x2 - 29 = x2 - (my)* = (x+ JTy)(x- my)
![\bf \cfrac{7x-14}{x-2}\implies \stackrel{common~factoring}{\cfrac{7(x-2)}{x-2}}\implies 7](https://tex.z-dn.net/?f=%5Cbf%20%5Ccfrac%7B7x-14%7D%7Bx-2%7D%5Cimplies%20%5Cstackrel%7Bcommon~factoring%7D%7B%5Ccfrac%7B7%28x-2%29%7D%7Bx-2%7D%7D%5Cimplies%207)
well, the only exclusion I can see is that x ≠ 2, because if "x" ever becomes 2, the denominator goes to 0 and the fraction goes poof.
I think it’s 138
Hope this helps
Answer:
Yes I’m pretty sure
Step-by-step explanation: