Algebra

Laws of indices

  • Multiplication:
  • Division:
  • Exponentiation:
  • Fractional exponents:
  • Negative exponents

Rationalising the denominator

To rationalise the denominator of a fraction, multiply by the conjugate radical of the denominator (e.g. for ) to create a difference of two squares.

Quadratics

A quadratic equation is a polynomial with degree 2. The general form is:

Quadratics can be solved by factorising. A quadratic with roots and can be factorised as . The roots, of the quadratic are where the expression equals zero.

Quadratic formula

The quadratic formula can be derived by completing the square on a general quadratic . A proof is provided below.

Discriminant

The discriminant of a quadratic equation with general equation is . If the discriminant is:

  • negative, then there are no real roots.
  • 0, then there is one repeated real root.
  • positive, then there are two distinct real roots.

If the discriminant is 0, then there is one repeated real root, which is:

If the quadratic has rational coefficients and is a root, then (the conjugate radical) is a root.

The line of symmetry is at . Quadratics can be put into completed square form to find their line of symmetry and vertex:

xyOpqVertex(p;q)Lineofsymmetryx=pf(x)=a(x¡p)2+q

Hidden quadratics

Quadratics can also be hidden by being quadratic in a function. For example, the below are all hidden quadratics:

These hidden quadratics can all be solved by doing a substitution (e.g. let ), or just directly factorising as if was just .

Polynomials

IS: expanding brackets, collecting like terms, factorising, simple algebraic division

Factor theorem

The factor theorem gives a connection between the roots of a polynomial and its factorisation. The two forms are:

Proofs

Quadratic formula

The quadratic formula can be derived as shown: