In Mathematics , a is a Polynomial Equation of the second Degree . The generalized form is
:
The letters , and are called coefficient, also called the ''free term''.
A quadratic equation with Real or Complex coefficients has two complex Roots (i.e., solutions for when ) usually denoted as and , although the two roots may be equal. These roots can be computed using the .
The quadratic formula is derived by the method of Completing The Square .
:
Dividing our quadratic equation by (which is allowed because is non-zero), we have
:
which is equivalent to
:
The equation is now in a form in which we can conveniently Complete The Square . To "complete the square" is to add a constant (i.e., in this case, a quantity that does not depend on ) to the expression to the left of "", that will make it a perfect square trinomial of the form . Since in this case is , we must have , so we add the square of to both sides, getting
:
The left side is now a perfect square; it is the square of . The right side can be written as a single fraction; the common denominator is . We get
:
Taking Square Root s of both sides yields
|
The alternative expression for the quadratic formula results from multiplying the top and bottom expression above with the conjugate of the numerator:
:
:
The formula and its proof remain correct if the coefficients
,
and
are
Complex Number s, or more generally members of any
Field whose
Characteristic is not
. (In a field of characteristic
, the element
is zero and it is impossible to divide by it.)
The symbol
:
in the formula should be understood as "either of the two elements whose square is
, if such elements exist". In some fields, some elements have no square roots and some have two; only zero has just one square root, except in fields of characteristic
.
Viète's Formulas give a simple relation between the roots of a polynomial and its coefficients. In the case of quadratic polynomial, they take the following form:
:
:
This yields a convenient expression when graphing a quadratic function. Since the graph is symmetric vertically about the
Vertex , when there are two real roots the vertex’s x-coordinate is located at the of the roots (or intercepts). Thus the x-coordinate of the vertex is given by the expression:
:
The y-coordinate can be obtained by substituting the above result into the function.
:
Certain higher-degree equations may be , such as:
:
.
Note that the highest exponent is twice the value of the exponent of the middle term. This equation may be resolved directly or with a simple substitution, using the methods that are available for the quadratic, such as
Factoring (also called factorising), the quadratic formula, or
Completing The Square .
On clay tablets dated between
1800 BC and
1600 BC , the ancient
Babylonia ns first discovered quadratic equations and also gave early methods for solving them.
Indian Mathematician Baudhayana who wrote a
Sulba Sutra in
Ancient India circa
8th Century BC first used quadratic equations of the form ax
2 = c and ax
2 + bx = c and also gave methods for solving them.
Babylonian Mathematicians from circa
400 BC and
Chinese Mathematicians from circa
200 BC used the method of
Completing The Square to solve quadratic equations with positive roots, but did not have a general formula.
Euclid produced a more abstract geometrical method around
300 BC . The ''Bakshali Manuscript'' written in India between 200 BC and
400 CE introduced the general algebraic formula for solving quadratic equations, and also introduced quadratic
Indeterminate equations (origin of type ax/c = y).
The first mathematician to have found negative solutions with the general algebraic formula, was
Brahmagupta (
India ,
7th Century ).
Muḥammad Ibn Mūsā Al-Ḵwārizmī (
Persia ,
9th Century ) developed a set of formulae that worked for positive solutions.
Abraham Bar Hiyya Ha-Nasi (also known by the
Latin name
Savasorda ) introduced the complete solution to Europe in his book ''Liber embadorum'' in the
12th Century .
Bhaskara II (India,
12th Century ) solved quadratic equations with more than one unknown.
Shridhara (India, 9th century) was one of the first mathematicians to give a general rule for solving a quadratic equation. His original work is lost but
Bhaskara II later quotes Shridhara's rule:
Multiply both sides of the equation by a known quantity equal to four times the coefficient of the square of the unknown; add to both sides a known quantity equal to the square of the coefficient of the unknown; then take the square root.