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A Quartic Problem (Posted on 2005-12-22) Difficulty: 4 of 5
It is given that A,B,C and D are roots of the quartic equation X^4 - X +2 = 0. Determine, whether or not (AB+CD) is a root of the equation X^3 – 8X –1 = 0.

See The Solution Submitted by K Sengupta    
Rating: 4.0000 (2 votes)

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re: Nothing elegant yet | Comment 3 of 7 |
(In reply to Nothing elegant yet by goFish)

You are right, goFish: The three different values for AB+CD you get by permuting the roots of X^4-X+2 give the three different roots of X^3-8X-1.  I had only considered one of the roots.  Hence we can solve a particular cubic if we can solve a particular quartic.  Is this a general thing?  Smells like Galois Theory (which is way beyond what we do on this site).



  Posted by Richard on 2005-12-23 00:15:23

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