Partial Fraction Decomposition

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around the topic of partial fraction decomposition, specifically focusing on the decomposition of a polynomial with a repeated factor in the denominator. Participants explore the rationale behind the standard form of decomposition and question alternative approaches.

Discussion Character

  • Conceptual clarification, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • The original poster questions why the decomposition must include separate terms for repeated factors, specifically asking about the validity of alternative decompositions. Some participants suggest that certain steps can be skipped when dealing with repeated linear factors, while others emphasize the importance of understanding why the standard form works.

Discussion Status

Participants are actively engaging with the problem, offering insights and corrections. There is a recognition of the need to clarify the reasoning behind the decomposition approach, and some guidance has been provided regarding when to simplify the process.

Contextual Notes

There is an emphasis on the specific nature of the problem, particularly the presence of repeated linear factors and the implications for the decomposition method. Participants are also considering the consequences of different forms of decomposition on the validity of the expressions.

CornMuffin
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Homework Statement


To find the decomposition of a polynomial with a repeated factor in the denominator, you should separate them into (x+a)^1 + ... + (x+a)^n. But, my question is why?

For example, why should you decompose it in the following way:
\frac{x+2}{(x+1)(x+3)^2} = \frac{A}{x+1} + \frac{B}{x+3} + \frac{C}{(x+3)^2}

why, for example, isn't it decomposed into either of the following ways:
\frac{x+2}{(x+1)(x+3)^2} = \frac{A}{x+1} + \frac{Bx+C}{(x+3)^2}
OR
\frac{x+2}{(x+1)(x+3)^2} = \frac{A}{x+1} + \frac{B}{x+3}
 
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\frac{x+2}{(x+1)(x+3)^{2}}\equiv \frac{A}{(x+1)}+\frac{Bx+D}{(x+3)^{2}}
\equiv \frac{A}{(x+1)}+\frac{B(x+3)-3B+D}{(x+3)^{2}}
\equiv \frac{A}{(x+1)}+\frac{B}{(x+3)}+\frac{-3B+D}{(x+3)^{2}}
\equiv \frac{A}{(x+1)}+\frac{B}{(x+3)}+\frac{C}{(x+3)^{2}}
 
Last edited:
Alexander2357 said:
\frac{x+2}{(x+1)(x+3)^{2}}\equiv \frac{A}{(x+1)}+\frac{Bx+D}{(x+3)^{2}}
\equiv \frac{A}{(x+1)}+\frac{B(x+3)-3B+D}{(x+3)^{2}}
\equiv \frac{A}{(x+1)}+\frac{B}{(x+3)}+\frac{-3B+D}{(x+3)^{2}}
\equiv \frac{A}{(x+1)}+\frac{B}{(x+3)}+\frac{C}{(x+3)^{2}}



Ok thank you so much, I understand.

But, you made a small mistake. I fixed it above
 
Alexander2357 said:
\frac{x+2}{(x+1)(x+3)^{2}}\equiv \frac{A}{(x+1)}+\frac{Bx+D}{(x+3)^{2}}
You don't need to do this for repeated linear factors, so most of that work can be skipped. You can start directly from this and skip most of the work below:
$$\frac{x+2}{(x+1)(x+3)^{2}}\equiv \frac{A}{x+1}+\frac{B}{x+3} + \frac{C}{(x + 3)^2}$$
A numerator of Bx + D would be used for an irreducible quadratic factor such as x2 + 1.
Alexander2357 said:
\equiv \frac{A}{(x+1)}+\frac{B(x-1)+B+D}{(x+3)^{2}}
\equiv \frac{A}{(x+1)}+\frac{B}{(x+3)}+\frac{B+D}{(x+3)^{2}}
\equiv \frac{A}{(x+1)}+\frac{B}{(x+3)}+\frac{C}{(x+3)^{2}}
 
CornMuffin said:
Ok thank you so much, I understand.

But, you made a small mistake. I fixed it above

You are welcome.
 
Mark44 said:
You don't need to do this for repeated linear factors, so most of that work can be skipped.

Yes, definitely, it can all be skipped but the question is specifically asking for why it works.
 
Alexander2357 said:
Yes, definitely, it can all be skipped but the question is specifically asking for why it works.
Either use long division on ##\displaystyle \ \frac{Bx+C}{x+3}\,, \ ## and then multiply the result by
##\displaystyle \ \frac{1}{x+3}\ .##
You could use the following rather than long division. Mark44 seems to be a big fan of it.

Rewrite ##\displaystyle \ \frac{x+K}{x+3}\ ## as ##\displaystyle \ \frac{x+3+K-3}{x+3}\ ## which splits into ##\displaystyle \ \frac{x+3}{x+3}+\frac{C-3}{x+3}\,, \ ## the first term being 1 .


(Mess around with the B & C as you please.)​


Alternatively, use a common denominator to combine ##\ \displaystyle \frac{B}{x+3} + \frac{C}{(x+3)^2}\ ## into one rational expression.
 
CornMuffin said:
For example, why should you decompose it in the following way:
\frac{x+2}{(x+1)(x+3)^2} = \frac{A}{x+1} + \frac{B}{x+3} + \frac{C}{(x+3)^2}

why, for example, isn't it decomposed into either of the following ways:
\frac{x+2}{(x+1)(x+3)^2} = \frac{A}{x+1} + \frac{Bx+C}{(x+3)^2}
OR
\frac{x+2}{(x+1)(x+3)^2} = \frac{A}{x+1} + \frac{B}{x+3}
For the latter case, if we multiply by (x+3), the lefthand side becomes
$$\frac{x+2}{(x+1)(x+3)}$$ while the righthand side becomes
$$A \frac{x+3}{x+1} + B.$$ The expression on the lefthand side has a vertical asymptote at ##x=-3##, but the one from the righthand side doesn't, which means the two sides can't be equal for all ##x##. This implies that the original decomposition isn't valid.
 

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