Why is it that when we write the

Answered question

2022-01-30

Why is it that when we write the result of a synthetic division, the term before it doesn't have an x on it? Ex. 
3x^2 + 16x + 37 + 112/x-4

Answer & Explanation

karton

karton

Expert2023-04-22Added 613 answers

When we use synthetic division to divide a polynomial by a linear expression (in this case, x-4), we write the result as a polynomial plus a remainder over the divisor. In your example, we have:
3x2+16x+37+112x-4=(3x+28)+(149x-4)

The first term on the right-hand side is the quotient of the division, which is a polynomial (in this case, 3x+28). The second term is the remainder of the division, which is a rational function (in this case, 149x-4).

Now, why doesn't the quotient have an x term in it? Well, let's think about what synthetic division is doing. It's essentially a shortcut for long division, where we're dividing a polynomial by a linear expression of the form x-a. When we perform synthetic division, we're actually dividing by x-a, not just by x. So, we're looking for a polynomial of the form Ax + B that satisfies:
(x-a)(Ax+B)=Ax2+(B-aA)x-aB

We want this polynomial to cancel out the first term of the dividend (in this case, 3x2), so we need A = 3. We also want it to cancel out the second term of the dividend (in this case, 16x), so we need B-aA=16, or B=28. That's why the quotient is 3x+28.

To summarize, the reason why the quotient of a synthetic division doesn't have an x term is because we're actually dividing by a linear expression of the form x-a, not just by x. The quotient is a polynomial of degree one less than the dividend, and its coefficients are determined by the algorithm of synthetic division. The remainder is a rational function that represents the leftover terms after the division is performed.

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