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The technique
of completing the square is
presented here primarily to
justify the quadratic formula,
which will be presented next.
However, the technique does
have applications besides
being used to derive the quadratic
formula. In analytic geometry,
for example, completing the
square is used to put the
equations of conic sections
into standard form.
Before considering
the technique of completing
the square, we must define
a perfect square trinomial.
Perfect Square Trinomial
What
happens when you square a
binomial?

·
Note that the
coefficient of the middle
term (2a) is twice
the square root of the constant
term (a2)
·
Thus the constant
term is the square of half
the coefficient of x
·
Important: These
observations only hold true
if the coefficient of x
is 1.
This
means that any trinomial that
satisfies this condition is
a perfect square. For example,
x2 + 8x
+ 16
is
a perfect square, because
half the coefficient of x
(which in this case is 4)
happens to be the square root
of the constant term (16).
That means that
x2
+ 8x + 16 = (x
+ 4)2
Multiply
out the binomial (x
+ 4) times itself and you
will see that this works.
The
technique of completing the
square is to take a trinomial
that is not a perfect square,
and make it into one by inserting
the correct constant term
(which is the square of half
the coefficient of x).
Of course, inserting a new
constant term has to be done
in an algebraically legal
manner, which means that the
same thing needs to be done
to both sides of the equation.
This is best demonstrated
with an example.
Example:
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Given
Equation: |

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Move
original constant to
other side: |

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Add
new constant to both
sides
(the square of half
the coefficient of x): |

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Write
left side as perfect
square: |

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Square
root both sides
(remember to use plus-or-minus): |

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Solve
for x: |

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Notes
·
Finds all real
roots. Factoring can only
find integer or rational roots.
·
When you write
it as a binomial squared,
the constant in the binomial
will be half of the coefficient
of x.
First divide through by the
coefficient, then proceed
with completing the square.
Example:
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Given
Equation: |

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Divide
through by coefficient
of x2:
(in this case a 2) |


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Move
constant to other side: |

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Add
new constant term:
(the square of half
the coefficient of x,
in this case 9/16): |

|
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Write
as a binomial squared:
(the constant in the
binomial is half the
coefficient of x) |

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Square
root both sides:
(remember to use plus-or-minus) |

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Solve
for x: |

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Thus
x = ½ or x
= -2
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