Functions: Higher degree polynomials
Higher degree inequalities
In the same manner as when solving a quadratic inequality, we can also solve an inequality with higher degree polynomials.
Solving a higher degree inequality
| Procedure | Example | |
| We solve the following inequality \[\blue{f(x)} \gt \green{g(x)}\] in which #\blue{f(x)}# and #\green{g(x)}# are polynomials. | #\blue{x^6+x^3+6} \gt \green{-2x^3+10}# (resp. solid and dashed) ![]() The solution is #x \lt \sqrt[3]{-4} \land x \gt 1#. |
|
| Step 1 | We solve the equality \[\blue{f(x)} = \green{g(x)}\] | |
| Step 2 | We sketch the graphs #\blue{f(x)}# and #\green{g(x)}#. | |
| Step 3 | With the help of step 1 and 2, determine for which values of #x# the inequality holds. In a coordinate system, the biggest graph is the one above the other. |
Please note that this procedure also holds for the inequality signs #\geq# and #\leq#, only now the #x#-values of the intersection points are also part of the solution.
#x\lt -5^{{{1}\over{7}}}\lor x\gt 4^{{{1}\over{7}}}#
| Step 1 | We solve the equality #x^{14}+x^7-10\cdot x+1=21-10\cdot x#. This is done like this: \[\begin{array}{rcl} x^{14}+x^7-10\cdot x+1&=&21-10\cdot x \\ &&\phantom{xxx}\blue{\text{original equation}}\\ x^{14}+x^7-20&=&0 \\&&\phantom{xxx}\blue{\text{reduced to }0}\\ \left(x^7-4\right)\cdot \left(x^7+5\right)&=&0 \\&&\phantom{xxx}\blue{\text{left hand side factorized}}\\ x^7-4=0 &\lor& x^7+5=0 \\&&\phantom{xxx}\blue{A\cdot B=0 \text{ if and only if }A=0\lor B=0}\\ x=-5^{{{1}\over{7}}} &\lor& x=4^{{{1}\over{7}}} \\&&\phantom{xxx}\blue{\text{constant terms to the right hand side and taken the root}}\\ \end{array} \] |
| Step 2 | We sketch the graphs #y=x^{14}+x^7-10\cdot x+1# (blue) and #y=21-10\cdot x# (green dashed). ![]() |
| Step 3 | We can read the solutions to the inequality from the graph. \[x\lt -5^{{{1}\over{7}}}\lor x\gt 4^{{{1}\over{7}}}\] |
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