Q. polynomial -roots (1 Viewer)

marsenal

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The question is:
Let a,b,c be the roots of the equation

x<sup>3</sup> + px + q = 0 where q doesn't equal zero

Find the equation who roots are:

a^-1(1-a), b^-1(1-b), c^-1(1-c)

ie. 1-a over a etc...

Let x= (y+1)^-1

therefore the new equation will be:

qx<sup>3</sup> + x<sup>2</sup>(p+3q) + x(2p+3q) + p + q + 1 = 0

is that close/right?
 
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bobo123

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can you explain to me how you got the constant to be 4?
 

bobo123

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i have the constant to be p+q+1

oh well
probably my mistake :)
 

KeypadSDM

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Solution:
For polynomial P(x) = x^3 + px + q
Roots are a, b, and c

For polynomial with roots: (1-a) * a^-1, (1-b) * b^-1, and (1-c) * c^-1. Use the transformation, x = (x + 1) ^ -1

.: 0 = (x + 1) ^ -3 + p(x + 1) ^ -1 + q
0 = 1 + p(x + 1)^2 + q(x + 1)^3 (Multiply by (x + 1)^3)
0 = 1 + p(x^2 + 2x + 1) + q(x^3 + 3x^2 + 3x + 1)
0 = qx^3 + (p + 3q)x^2 + (2p + 3q)x + (1 + p + q)

.: G(x) =qx^3 + (p + 3q)x^2 + (2p + 3q)x + (1 + p + q)
has roots (1-a) * a^-1, (1-b) * b^-1, and (1-c) * c^-1.
Where P(x) has roots, a, b, and c.

And it seems while i was writing that you corrected your original post, oh well.
 

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