How do you find all the zeros of f(x)=12x^3+31x^2-17x-6?

1 Answer
Aug 3, 2016

f(x) has zeros: 2/3, -1/4, -3

Explanation:

f(x) = 12x^3+31x^2-17x-6

By the rational root theorem, any rational zeros of f(x) are expressible in the form p/q for integers p, q with p a divisor of the constant term -6 and q a divisor of the coefficient 12 of the leading term.

So the only possible rational zeros are:

+-1/12, +-1/6, +-1/4, +-1/3, +-1/2, +-2/3, +-3/4, +-1, +-4/3, +-3/2, +-2, +-3, +-6

That's rather a lot of possibilities to check, so let's search by approximately binary chop:

f(0) = -6

f(1) = 12+31-17-7 = 19

f(1/2) = 3/2+31/4-17/2-6 = (6+31-34-24)/4 = -21/4

f(3/4) = 12(27/64)+31(9/16)-17(3/4)-6 = (81+279-204-96)/16 = 15/4

f(2/3) = 12(8/27)+31(4/9)-17(2/3)-6 = (32+124-102-54)/9 = 0

So x=2/3 is a zero and (3x-2) is a factor:

12x^3+31x^2-17x-6 = (3x-2)(4x^2+13x+3)

To factor 4x^2+13x+2 we can use an AC method: Look for a pair of factors of AC = 4*3=12 with sum B=13.

The pair 12, 1 works. Use this pair to split the middle term and factor by grouping:

4x^2+13x+3 = 4x^2+12x+x+3 = 4x(x+3)+1(x+3) = (4x+1)(x+3)

So the remaining zeros are x=-1/4 and x=-3