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If one zero of the polynomial p(x) = x^3 – 6x^2 + 11x – 6 is 3, find the other two zeros.

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Question

If one zero of the polynomial p(x) = x3 – 6x2 + 11x – 6 is 3, find the other two zeros.

Sum
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Solution

1. Identify the linear factor

Since x = 3 is a given zero of the polynomial, according to the Factor Theorem, (x – 3) must be a linear factor of p(x).

2. Divide the polynomial

To find the remaining factors, divide p(x) by (x – 3) using polynomial long division or synthetic division:

`(x^3 - 6x^2 + 11x - 6)/(x - 3) = x^2 - 3x + 2`

This gives us the rewritten polynomial expression:

p(x) = (x – 3)(x2 – 3x + 2)

3. Factorize the quadratic quotient 

Next, find the zeros of the remaining quadratic quotient by setting it equal to zero and splitting the middle term:

x2 – 3x + 2 = 0

x2 – 2x – x + 2 = 0

x(x – 2) – 1(x – 2) = 0

(x – 1)(x – 2) = 0

Solving for x gives:

x – 1 = 0

⇒ x = 1

x – 2 = 0

⇒ x = 2

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Chapter 2: Polynomials - TEST YOURSELF [Page 76]

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R.S. Aggarwal Mathematics [English] Class 10
Chapter 2 Polynomials
TEST YOURSELF | Q 17. | Page 76
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