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Roots Of The Equation (Posted on 2003-08-20) Difficulty: 3 of 5
Let us consider the quadratic equation: ax˛ + bx + c = 0.

We assign values to the coefficients a, b and c by throwing a die.

What is the probability that the equation will have real roots ?

See The Solution Submitted by Ravi Raja    
Rating: 2.6667 (9 votes)

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Roots of Quadratic Equation | Comment 16 of 17 |
Since we are using 3 six-sided die to compute A, B and C values for a quadratic equation AX2 + BX + C = 0, there are 6 cubed, or 216, unique combinations. In order for the equation to have real roots, B squared - 4 x A x C must be greater than or equal to zero. A straight-forward Excel model shows this occurs 43 out of 216 times. The probability of realizing rational roots is therefore 43/216 = 19.9%. Gordon S.
  Posted by Gordon Steel on 2003-09-22 17:34:38
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