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You can evaluate a polynomial,
you can factorise a polynomial,
you can solve a polynomial equation.
But a polynomial is not a specific question so it cannot be answered.
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No.
A matrix polynomial is an algebraic expression in which the variable is a matrix.
A polynomial matrix is a matrix in which each element is a polynomial.
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Polynomial vs non polynomial time complexity
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"Non-polynomial" can mean just about anything... How alike it is with the polynomial depends on what specifically you choose to include.
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Evaluating a polynomial is finding the value of the polynomial for a given value of the variable, usually denoted by x.
Solving a polynomial equation is finding the value of the variable, x, for which the polynomial equation is true.
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It will be a cubic polynomial.
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The "roots" of a polynomial are the solutions of the equation polynomial = 0. That is, any value which you can replace for "x", to make the polynomial equal to zero.
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a polynomial of degree...............is called a cubic polynomial
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A polynomial of degree 0 is a polynomial without any variables, such as 9.
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The degree of a polynomial is the highest exponent on any independent variable in the polynomial.
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seventh degree polynomial
x3 times x4 = x7
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It means that you can do any of those operations, and again get a number from the set - in this case, a polynomial. Note that if you divide a polynomial by another polynomial, you will NOT always get a polynomial, so the set of polynomials is not closed under division.
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The zero of a polynomial in the variable x, is a value of x for which the polynomial is zero. It is a value where the graph of the polynomial intersects the x-axis.
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That means that you divide one polynomial by another polynomial. Basically, if you have polynomials "A" and "B", you look for a polynomial "C" and a remainder "R", such that:
B x C + R = A
... such that the remainder has a lower degree than polynomial "B", the polynomial by which you are dividing. For example, if you divide by a polynomial of degree 3, the remainder must be of degree 2 or less.
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The value of a polynomial is determined by that of the variable.
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A polynomial is always going to be an algebraic expression, but an algebraic expression doesn't always have to be a polynomial. In another polynomial is a subset of algebraic expression.
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No. A quadratic polynomial is degree 2 (2 is the highest power); a cubic polynomial is degree 3 (3 is the highest power).
No. A quadratic polynomial is degree 2 (2 is the highest power); a cubic polynomial is degree 3 (3 is the highest power).
No. A quadratic polynomial is degree 2 (2 is the highest power); a cubic polynomial is degree 3 (3 is the highest power).
No. A quadratic polynomial is degree 2 (2 is the highest power); a cubic polynomial is degree 3 (3 is the highest power).
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No.
A polynomial is not a number. Do you mean can every number be represented by a polynomial?
If so, the answer is still no.
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That already is a polynomial in standard form.
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It is called the property of "closure".
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Either graph the polynomial on graph paper manually or on a graphing calculator.
If it is a "y=" polynomial, then the zeroes are the points or point where the polynomial touches the x-axis.
If it is an "x=" polynomial, then the zeroes are the points or point where the polynomial touches the y-axis.
If it touches neither, then it has no zeroes.
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We can't answer that without knowing what the polynomial is.
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no...
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The degree of a polynomial is the highest power of the variable.
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No. It would not be a polynomial function then.
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In the 1880s, Poincaré created functions which give the solution to the order polynomial equation to the order of the polynomial equation
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The degree of a polynomial is the highest exponent in the polynomial.
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To square an expression, multiply it by itself. And to multiply a polynomial by a polynomial, multiply each part of one polynomial by each part of the other polynomial.
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