Prove that the polynomial x^6+x^4−5x^2+1 has at least four real roots. Talking analysis here, using the definition of continuity, intermediate value theorem, and extreme value theorem.

Brandon Monroe

Brandon Monroe

Answered question

2022-08-07

Prove that the polynomial x 6 + x 4 5 x 2 + 1 has at least four real roots.
Talking analysis here, using the definition of continuity, intermediate value theorem, and extreme value theorem.

Answer & Explanation

neglegir86

neglegir86

Beginner2022-08-08Added 12 answers

Giving your polynomial the name f,

f ( 2 ) is positive.
f ( 1 ) is negative.
f ( 0 ) is positive.
f ( 1 ) is negative.
f ( 2 ) is positive.

So the intermediate value theorem says there must be a root in each of ( 2 , 1 ), ( 1 , 0 ), ( 0 , 1 ), and ( 1 , 2 )
Flambergru

Flambergru

Beginner2022-08-09Added 4 answers

Hint: the function is even, so you just need to show it has at least two positive real roots.

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