Difference between revisions of "Cubic Equation"
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We can solve this via the [[quadratic formula]]. After <math>u</math> and <math>v</math> are obtained, we have <math>y = \sqrt[3]{u} - \sqrt[3]{v}</math> and <math>x = \sqrt[3]{u} - \sqrt[3]{v} - \frac{b}{3a}</math>. (Note: "<math>\sqrt[3]{ }</math>" means any cube root. | We can solve this via the [[quadratic formula]]. After <math>u</math> and <math>v</math> are obtained, we have <math>y = \sqrt[3]{u} - \sqrt[3]{v}</math> and <math>x = \sqrt[3]{u} - \sqrt[3]{v} - \frac{b}{3a}</math>. (Note: "<math>\sqrt[3]{ }</math>" means any cube root. | ||
− | ===TLDR?=== | + | ====TLDR?==== |
<math>x = \sqrt[3]{u} - \sqrt[3]{v} - \frac{b}{3a}</math> where u and v are roots of the system <math>\begin{cases} uv = \frac{p^3}{27} \\ v - u = q \end{cases}</math>. | <math>x = \sqrt[3]{u} - \sqrt[3]{v} - \frac{b}{3a}</math> where u and v are roots of the system <math>\begin{cases} uv = \frac{p^3}{27} \\ v - u = q \end{cases}</math>. | ||
Revision as of 16:07, 9 December 2020
A cubic equation is an equation of the form:
.
A cubic equation has 3 roots, either all real OR one real, two complex.
Contents
Solving Cubic Equations
Converting to a Depressed Equation
You start with the equation .
Divide both sides by a: .
Now we change the coefficient of to (e.g. change it to a depressed cubic). We do this by substituting or , giving:
.
is and is , so now we have .
Solving the Depressed Equation
Now here comes the smart part. Substitute .
The equation becomes . Simplification:
We want that last term to equal , so we can set . (We can't use , because then , which is not necessarily true.) Solving this equation gives us . If , then . We now have a system of equations:
.
We can solve this via the quadratic formula. After and are obtained, we have and . (Note: "" means any cube root.
TLDR?
where u and v are roots of the system .
The Cubic Formula
The cubic formula can be obtained by using the above method. These are the steps:
The depressed cubic is of the form .
and are the roots of the system of equations . We can solve this by substitution:
(We are still using p and q because they might get a little messy if we use p and q in terms of a, b, c, and d.)
(comes from )
(See? I told you it would be messy.)