How To Use The Quadratic Formula

A quadratic equation is one that contains a single variable and in which the variable is squared. The standard form for this type of equation, which always produces a parabola when graphed, is ​ax2 + ​bx​ + ​c​ = 0, where ​a​, ​b​ and ​c​ are constants. Finding solutions isn't as straightforward as it is for a linear equation, and part of the reason is that, because of the squared term, there are always two solutions. You can use one of three methods to solve a quadratic equation. You can factor the terms, which works best with simpler equations, or you can complete the square. The third method is to use the quadratic formula, which a generalized solution to every quadratic equation.

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The Quadratic Formula

For a general quadratic equation of the form ​ax2 + ​bx​ + ​c​ = 0, the solutions are given by this formula:

\(x = \frac{−b ±\sqrt{b^2 − 4ac} }{2a}\)

Note that the ± sign inside the brackets means that there are always two solutions. One of the solutions uses

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\(\frac{−b +\sqrt{b^2 − 4ac} }{2a}\)

and the other solution uses

\(\frac{−b -\sqrt{b^2 − 4ac} }{2a}\)

Using the Quadratic Formula

Before you can make use of the quadratic formula, you have to make sure the equation is in standard form. It may not be. Some ​x2 terms may be on both sides of the equation, so you'll have to collect those on the right side. Do the same with all x terms and constants.

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Example: Find the solutions to the equation

\(3x^2 – 12 = 2x(x -1)\)

1. Convert to standard form

Expand the brackets:

\(3x^2 – 12 = 2x^2 – 2x\)

Subtract 2​x2 and from both sides. Add 2​x​ to both sides

\(3x^2 – 2x^2 + 2x – 12 = 2x^2 -2x^2 -2x + 2x\)
\(3x^2 – 2x^2 + 2x – 12 = 0\)
\(x^2 – 2x -12 = 0\)

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This equation is in standard form ​ax2 + ​bx​ + ​c​ = 0 where ​a​ = 1, ​b​ = −2 and ​c​ = 12

2. Plug the values of a, b and c into the quadratic formula

The quadratic formula is

\(x = \frac{−b ±\sqrt{b^2 − 4ac} }{2a}\)

Since ​a​ = 1, ​b​ = −2 and ​c​ = −12, this becomes

\(x = \frac{−(-2) ±\sqrt{(-2)^2 − 4×1×(-12)} }{2×1}\)

3. Simplify

\(x = \frac{2 ±\sqrt{(4+ 48} }{2} \
\,\
x = \frac{2 ±\sqrt{52} }{2} \
\,\
x = \frac{2 ±7.21 }{2} \
\,\
x = \frac{9.21}{2} \text{ and } x = \frac{−5.21}{2} \
\,\
x = 4.605 \text{ and } x = −2.605\)

Two Other Ways to Solve Quadratic Equations

You can solve quadratic equations by factoring. To do this, you more or less guess at a pair of numbers that, when added together, give the constant ​b​ and, when multiplied together, give the constant ​c​. This method can be difficult when fractions are involved. and wouldn't work well for the above example.

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The other method is to complete the square. If you have an equation is standard form, ​ax2 + ​bx​ + ​c​ = 0, put ​c​ on the right side and add the term (​b​/2)2 to both sides. This allows you to express the left side as (​x​ + ​d​)2, where ​d​ is a constant. You can then take the square root of both sides and solve for ​x​. Again, the equation in the above example is easier to solve using the quadratic formula.

Cite This Article

MLA

Deziel, Chris. "How To Use The Quadratic Formula" sciencing.com, https://www.sciencing.com/how-to-use-the-quadratic-formula-13712185/. 3 November 2020.

APA

Deziel, Chris. (2020, November 3). How To Use The Quadratic Formula. sciencing.com. Retrieved from https://www.sciencing.com/how-to-use-the-quadratic-formula-13712185/

Chicago

Deziel, Chris. How To Use The Quadratic Formula last modified August 30, 2022. https://www.sciencing.com/how-to-use-the-quadratic-formula-13712185/

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