How do you factor y= 6x^3+13x-14x+3 ?
1 Answer
Use the rational root theorem to help find the first root and factor, then an AC method to factor the remaining quadratic to find:
6x^3+13x^2-14x+3 = (3x-1)(2x-1)(x+3)
Explanation:
I will guess that
Let
By the rational root theorem, any rational zeros of
That means that the only possible rational roots are:
+-1/6 ,+-1/3 ,+-1/2 ,+-1 ,+-3/2 ,+-3
Let's try some of these:
f(1/6) = 6/216+13/36-14/6+3
=(1+13-84+108)/36 = 38/36 = 19/18
f(-1/6) = (-1+13+84+108)/36 = 204/36 = 17/3
f(1/3) = 6/27+13/9-14/3+3
=(2+13-42+27)/9 = 0
So
6x^3+13x^2-14x+3 = (3x-1)(2x^2+5x-3)
Then use an AC method to help factor
Look for a pair of factors of
The pair
2x^2+5x-3
= 2x^2+6x-x-3
= (2x^2+6x)-(x+3)
= 2x(x+3)-1(x+3)
= (2x-1)(x+3)
Putting it all together:
6x^3+13x^2-14x+3 = (3x-1)(2x-1)(x+3)