Zeros of Polynomial Functions: Learn It 3

Factor Theorem

The Factor Theorem is another theorem that helps us analyze polynomial equations. It tells us how the zeros of a polynomial are related to the factors.

the factor theorem

According to the factor theorem, [latex]k[/latex] is a zero of [latex]f(x)[/latex] if and only if [latex](x−k)[/latex] is a factor of [latex]f(x)[/latex].

Let’s walk through the proof of the theorem.

Recall that the Division Algorithm.

[latex]f(x) = (x - k)q(x) + r[/latex]

If [latex]k[/latex] is a zero, then the remainder [latex]r[/latex] is [latex]f(k) = 0[/latex] and [latex]f(x) = (x - k)q(x) + 0[/latex] or [latex]f(x) = (x - k)q(x)[/latex].

Notice, written in this form, [latex]x - k[/latex] is a factor of [latex]f(x)[/latex]. We can conclude if [latex]k[/latex] is a zero of [latex]f(x)[/latex], then [latex]x - k[/latex] is a factor of [latex]f(x)[/latex].

Similarly, if [latex]x - k[/latex] is a factor of [latex]f(x)[/latex], then the remainder of the Division Algorithm [latex]f(x) = (x - k)q(x) + r[/latex] is [latex]0[/latex]. This tells us that [latex]k[/latex] is a zero.

This pair of implications is the Factor Theorem. As we will soon see, a polynomial of degree [latex]n[/latex] in the complex number system will have [latex]n[/latex] zeros. We can use the Factor Theorem to completely factor a polynomial into the product of [latex]n[/latex] factors. Once the polynomial has been completely factored, we can easily determine the zeros of the polynomial.

How to: Given a factor and a third-degree polynomial, use the Factor Theorem to factor the polynomial.

  1. Use synthetic division to divide the polynomial by [latex](x-k)[/latex]
  2. Confirm that the remainder is [latex]0[/latex].
  3. Write the polynomial as the product of [latex](x-k)[/latex] and the quadratic quotient.
  4. If possible, factor the quadratic.
  5. Write the polynomial as the product of factors.
Show that [latex](x + 2)[/latex] is a factor of [latex]x^3 - 6x^2 - x + 30[/latex]. Find the remaining factors. Use the factors to determine the zeros of the polynomial.

Find the zeros of [latex]f\left(x\right)=4{x}^{3}-3x - 1[/latex] and graph the function.