How do you solve y = x^2 -8x + 16 graphically and algebraically?

2 Answers
Feb 11, 2018

see below

Explanation:

Graphically

the roots are where the graph crosses the x-axis.

that is when y=0

graph{x^2-8x+16 [-3.74, 14.04, -2.56, 6.33]}

As can be seen from the graph it touches the x-axis at one point only

x=4

Algebraically

we could use factorising., completing the square or the formula.

look for factorising first

x^2-8x=16=0

(x-4)^2=(x-4)(x-4)=0

:. x-4=0=>x=4

the repeated brackets show that we have repeated roots, and that the x-axis is a tangent to the graph.

Feb 11, 2018

y = x^2 - 8x + 16

Let's solve it algebraically first:

We solve this by finding the "zeros" or x-intercepts of the equation. To do this, we factor the equation, if possible.

We need to find 2 numbers (can be the same) that add up to -8 and multiply to 16.
-4 works:
-4 + -4 = -8
-4 * -4 = 16

So our equation is:
y = (x-4)(x-4) or y = (x-4)^2

Since we are finding the x-intercept(s), let's set y = 0. So:
0 = (x-4)^2

To simplify this, let's root both sides by 2:
sqrt(0) = sqrt((x-4)^2)

0 = x-4

x = 4

So the x-intercept is at (4, 0).


To graph this, we find the vertex and the slope.

In this case, since there is only one x-intercept, that means that it is the vertex.

The slope depends on the coefficient, or the number in front of the highest degree term.
x^2 means 1x^2, so our slope is one.

Let's graph this now!

enter image source here

As you can see, the x-intercept is the same as the vertex.

Hope this helps!