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  2. Cubic equation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cubic_equation

    A cubic equation with real coefficients can be solved geometrically using compass, straightedge, and an angle trisector if and only if it has three real roots. [30]: Thm. 1 A cubic equation can be solved by compass-and-straightedge construction (without trisector) if and only if it has a rational root.

  3. Cubic function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cubic_function

    A cubic function with real coefficients has either one or three real roots (which may not be distinct); [1] all odd-degree polynomials with real coefficients have at least one real root. The graph of a cubic function always has a single inflection point. It may have two critical points, a local minimum and a local maximum. Otherwise, a cubic ...

  4. Geometrical properties of polynomial roots - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geometrical_properties_of...

    A small change of coefficients may induce a dramatic change of the roots, including the change of a real root into a complex root with a rather large imaginary part (see Wilkinson's polynomial). A consequence is that, for classical numeric root-finding algorithms , the problem of approximating the roots given the coefficients can be ill ...

  5. Lill's method - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lill's_method

    Finding roots −1/2, −1/ √ 2, and 1/ √ 2 of the cubic 4x 3 + 2x 2 − 2x − 1, showing how negative coefficients and extended segments are handled. Each number shown on a colored line is the negative of its slope and hence a real root of the polynomial. To employ the method, a diagram is drawn starting at the origin.

  6. Vieta's formulas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vieta's_formulas

    Vieta's formulas are frequently used with polynomials with coefficients in any integral domain R.Then, the quotients / belong to the field of fractions of R (and possibly are in R itself if happens to be invertible in R) and the roots are taken in an algebraically closed extension.

  7. Discriminant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discriminant

    Similarly, the discriminant of a cubic polynomial is zero if and only if the polynomial has a multiple root. In the case of a cubic with real coefficients, the discriminant is positive if the polynomial has three distinct real roots, and negative if it has one real root and two distinct complex conjugate roots.

  8. Rational root theorem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rational_root_theorem

    If the rational root test finds no rational solutions, then the only way to express the solutions algebraically uses cube roots. But if the test finds a rational solution r, then factoring out (x – r) leaves a quadratic polynomial whose two roots, found with the quadratic formula, are the remaining two roots of the cubic, avoiding cube roots.

  9. Cube root - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cube_root

    Cubic equations, which are polynomial equations of the third degree (meaning the highest power of the unknown is 3) can always be solved for their three solutions in terms of cube roots and square roots (although simpler expressions only in terms of square roots exist for all three solutions, if at least one of them is a rational number).

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