How do you find the vertex of y=x^2+10x+21?

2 Answers
Mar 26, 2018

"vertex" = (-5, -4)

Explanation:

x=-b/(2a)

x=-10/(2(1))

x=-5

Sub -5 into the equation

y=(-5)^2 + 10(-5) + 21

y = -4

The formula -b/(2a) is used to find the axis of symmetry which is
always the x value of the vertex. Once you find the x value of the vertex, you simply substitute that value into the quadratic equation and find the y value, which in this case, is the vertex.

Mar 26, 2018

(-5,-4)

Explanation:

You have to use the quadratic formula x=(-b+-sqrt(b^2-4ac))/2a
which becomes
x=-b/(2a)+-(sqrt(b^2-4ac)/(2a))
We know that -b/(2a) is constant and that the other part is plussing and minusing from it

So it is the vertex and as a=1 b=10 c=21 i.e. just the coefficents of all the terms in sequence.

The vertex must be -10/(2*1) so the x co-ordinate of the vertex is -5

Plug in f(-5) and you get the y co-ordinate
f(-5)=(-5)^2+10(-5)+21 becomes f(-5)=25-50+21
so f(-5)=-4

so the co-ordiantes of the vertex are (-5,-4)