How do you write a polynomial in standard form, then classify it by degree and number of terms #2b^2 – 4b^3 + 6#?

1 Answer
Apr 10, 2018

Standard Form: #-4b^3 + 2b^2 + 6#
Degree: 3
Num. Terms: 3

Explanation:

The standard form of a polynomial is #C_1 x^n + C_2x^(n-1) + ... + + C_n x + C_(n+1)#, where each #C_j# is a constant. This is not as complicated as it looks. You simply write the polynomial with decreasing terms of your variable, from left to right.

So #2b^2 - 4b^3 + 6# in standard form is #-4b^3 + 2b^2 + 6#. Note that with each term, the degree of #b# decreases.

The degree of a term is the highest exponent affecting the variable. So #2x^7# has a degree of #7#. Also, #1000x = 1000x^1# has a degree of #1#. A constant, like #8#, has a degree of #0#.

The degree of a polynomial corresponds to the term in it which has the highest degree. In our case, #-4b^3 + 2b^2 + 6# has a degree of #3#, because #-4b^3# has a degree of #3#.

The number of terms in a polynomial is the number of "things" being added together. Here, we have #3# "things" be added together, with those "things" being #-4b^3#, #2b^2# and #6#.