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Question
Discuss the nature of the roots of the following equation without actually solving it:
6x2 + 7x – 10 = 0
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Solution
Given: 6x2 + 7x – 10 = 0
Step-wise calculation:
1. Compare with ax2 + bx + c = 0: a = 6, b = 7, c = –10.
2. Discriminant Δ = b2 – 4ac
= 72 – 4 × 6 × (–10)
= 49 + 240
= 289
By the discriminant test Δ = b2 – 4ac the sign of Δ determines whether roots are real/equal/imaginary.
3. Here Δ = 289 > 0 and Δ = 172 is a perfect square.
Δ > 0 ⇒ The roots are real and unequal (since Δ ≠ 0).
4. When the coefficients are integers or rationals and the discriminant is a perfect square, the square-root term in the quadratic formula is rational, so the two roots given by `(−b ± sqrt(Δ))/(2a)` are rational.
By contrast, a non-square positive Δ gives irrational roots e.g., `sqrt(48)` leads to irrational expressions.
Because Δ = 289 = 172 > 0, the equation has two distinct (unequal) real roots and since Δ is a perfect square and coefficients are integers, those roots are rational.
Hence, rational and unequal is correct.
