How do you solve the quadratic inequality x^2-9x +18 >0?

2 Answers
Aug 6, 2015

x^2-9x+18 = (x-3)(x-6) so x^2-9x+18 = 0 when x=3 and x=6. Since the coefficient of the x^2 term is positive, x^2-9x+18 > 0 when x in (-oo, 3) uu (6, oo).

Explanation:

x^2-9x+18 = (x-3)(x-6) has zeros x=3 and x=6.

When x < 3 both (x-3) < 0 and (x-6) < 0, so (x-3)(x-6) > 0

When 3 <= x <= 6 we have (x-3) >= 0 and (x-6) <= 0, so (x-3)(x-6) <= 0.

When x > 6, both (x-3) > 0 and (x-6) > 0, so (x-3)(x-6) > 0

Putting these together:

x^2-9x+18 = (x-3)(x-6) > 0

for x in (-oo, 3) uu (6, oo)

graph{x^2-9x+18 [-5.71, 14.29, -3.68, 6.32]}

Aug 16, 2015

Solve f(x) = x^2 - 9x + 18 > 0

Ans: (-infinity, 3) and (5, infinity)

Explanation:

First, solve f(x) = x^2 - 9x + 18 = 0.
Roots have same sign. Factor pairs of (18) --> (2, 9)(3, 6). This sum is 9 = -b. Then the 2 real roots are: 3 and 6.
Use the algebraic method to solve f(x) > 0. Between the 2 real roots
(3) and (5), f(x) < 0 as opposite to the sign of a = 1. f(x) is positive (> 0) outside the interval (3, 5).
Answer by open intervals: (-infinity, 3) and (5, infinity)