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  2. Cubic equation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cubic_equation

    For solving the cubic equation x 3 + m 2 x = n where n > 0, Omar Khayyám constructed the parabola y = x 2 /m, the circle that has as a diameter the line segment [0, n/m 2] on the positive x-axis, and a vertical line through the point where the circle and the parabola intersect above the x-axis.

  3. Cubic function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cubic_function

    The graph of any cubic function is similar to such a curve. The graph of a cubic function is a cubic curve, though many cubic curves are not graphs of functions. Although cubic functions depend on four parameters, their graph can have only very few shapes. In fact, the graph of a cubic function is always similar to the graph of a function of ...

  4. Cube (algebra) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cube_(algebra)

    [12] [13] Cubic equations were known to the ancient Greek mathematician Diophantus. [14] Hero of Alexandria devised a method for calculating cube roots in the 1st century CE. [ 15 ] Methods for solving cubic equations and extracting cube roots appear in The Nine Chapters on the Mathematical Art , a Chinese mathematical text compiled around the ...

  5. Resolvent cubic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resolvent_cubic

    Graph of the polynomial function x 4 + x 3 – x 2 – 7x/4 – 1/2 (in green) together with the graph of its resolvent cubic R 4 (y) (in red). The roots of both polynomials are visible too. In algebra, a resolvent cubic is one of several distinct, although related, cubic polynomials defined from a monic polynomial of degree four:

  6. Lill's method - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lill's_method

    In 1936, Margherita Piazzola Beloch showed how Lill's method could be adapted to solve cubic equations using paper folding. [6] If simultaneous folds are allowed, then any n th-degree equation with a real root can be solved using n − 2 simultaneous folds. [7]

  7. Ars Magna (Cardano book) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ars_Magna_(Cardano_book)

    The book, which is divided into forty chapters, contains the first published algebraic solution to cubic and quartic equations.Cardano acknowledges that Tartaglia gave him the formula for solving a type of cubic equations and that the same formula had been discovered by Scipione del Ferro.

  8. Solution in radicals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solution_in_radicals

    A solution in radicals or algebraic solution is an expression of a solution of a polynomial equation that is algebraic, that is, relies only on addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, raising to integer powers, and extraction of n th roots (square roots, cube roots, etc.). A well-known example is the quadratic formula

  9. Quartic equation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quartic_equation

    This is a cubic equation in y. Solve for y using any method for solving such equations (e.g. conversion to a reduced cubic and application of Cardano's formula). Any of the three possible roots will do.