How do you factor a cube to identify asymptotes and holes in graphs?

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Homework Help Overview

The original poster is exploring how to factor a cubic polynomial to identify points where the denominator is zero, which indicates the presence of asymptotes or holes in the graph. The context involves understanding polynomial factorization, particularly for cubic equations.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Mathematical reasoning, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the factor theorem and suggest substituting potential roots into the polynomial to identify factors. There are mentions of dividing the cubic by identified factors and using the rational roots theorem for further exploration.

Discussion Status

Some participants have offered guidance on identifying factors and suggested methods for polynomial division. Multiple approaches to factorization are being explored, with no explicit consensus reached on a single method.

Contextual Notes

The original poster's inquiry is framed within the constraints of homework, focusing on the identification of asymptotes and holes specifically through polynomial factorization.

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Homework Statement



I am trying to find out when the denominator of this equation is zero so I can tell when the graph has asymptotes or holes. For squares I factor such as x2+2x-15 = (x+5) (x-3). How do I do that with a cube?

Homework Equations



(x-5) (x+3)
X3-5x2+x-5
 
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Have you tried the factor theorem?

Take factors of the last coefficient, which in this case is -5. So you have +/- 1,5 as factors. Substitute those into the polynomial to see which give you 0. In this case it turns out to be 5, s (x-5) is a factor. Now divide X^3-5x^2+x-5 by (x-5), which will give you a quadratic with a remainder of 0. You may or may not be able to further factor the quadratic.
 
Sometimes you can factor just by looking at it, I see x^2*(x-5)+(x-5) right away. In more complicated cases it's handy to use the fact if you write the f(x)=the polynomial, then f(a)=0 means (x-a) is a factor. Divide it out and then try to factor what's left. For easily guessing what might be a root, look up the 'rational roots theorem'.
 
Thank you!
 

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