Let P be a polynomial of degree n , n &#x2265;<!-- ≥ --> 2 , P ( X

Jayla Christensen

Jayla Christensen

Answered question

2022-06-15

Let P be a polynomial of degree n , n 2, P ( X ) = i = 1 n ( X z i ) m i
with zeros z 1 , z 2 , , z n
Decompose the rational fraction P P
My thoughts:
P ( X ) = i = 1 n ( X z i ) m i
P ( X ) = i = 1 n m i ( X z i ) m i 1 ? ? ( X z i ) m ?
I don't know with what i should fill the ?
Then:
P P = i = 1 n m i ( X z i ) m i 1 ? ? ( X z i ) m i i = 1 n ( X z i ) m i = ?
I'm stuck here

Answer & Explanation

gaiageoucm5p

gaiageoucm5p

Beginner2022-06-16Added 20 answers

You can act as follows:
P ( X ) = i = 1 n ( X z i ) m i P ( X ) = i n m i ( X z i ) m i 1 j i ( X z j ) m j = i n m i ( X z i ) m i 1 j i ( X z j ) m j ( X z i X z i ) = i n m i ( X z i ) m i 2 i = 1 n ( X z i ) m i
Hence
P ( X ) P ( X ) = i = 1 n m i ( X z i ) m i 2
Kendrick Hampton

Kendrick Hampton

Beginner2022-06-17Added 7 answers

The product rule generalizes such that the result is the sum of things where each thing is a derivative of one of the factors times the rest of the original products. For example ( f g h ) = f g h + f g h + f g h . So for your product, you want the product from j = 1 to i 1 and then from j = i + 1 to n

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