How do you factor the trinomial 2x^2 - 8x + 5?

1 Answer
May 15, 2016

2x^2-8x+5=2(x-2-sqrt(6)/2)(x-2+sqrt(6)/2)

Explanation:

Complete the square, then use the difference of squares identity:

a^2-b^2=(a-b)(a+b)

with a=(x-2) and b=sqrt(6)/2 as follows:

2x^2-8x+5

=2(x^2-4x+5/2)

=2(x^2-4x+4-6/4)

=2((x-2)^2-(sqrt(6)/2)^2)

=2((x-2)-sqrt(6)/2)((x-2)+sqrt(6)/2)

=2(x-2-sqrt(6)/2)(x-2+sqrt(6)/2)

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Footnote

Why did I choose this method, rather than trying an AC method, etc.?

2x^2-8x+5 is in the form ax^2+bx+c with a=2, b=-8 and c=5.

This has discriminant given by the formula:

Delta = b^2-4ac = (-8)^2-(4*2*5) = 64-40 = 24

which is not a perfect square, so the factors will not have rational coefficients.

We could use the quadratic formula to find them, but completing the square is just as powerful and less "magic".