Martyn Arthur
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What does your post have to do with complex numbers?Martyn Arthur said:TL;DR Summary: Finding a solution +- to the quadratic formula
I understand the basic maths but I am getting varying answers as to whether these are real distinct roots or not. Could you please explain the mechanism for deciding this. Thanks in anticipation.View attachment 351948
No. ##-1-2\sqrt{3}\neq -(-1+2\sqrt{3}).## In fact, we have so-called conjugates. ##-2\sqrt{3}=-(+2\sqrt{3})## but the constant term ##-1## is in both solutions the same. If the roots were complex numbers, sayMartyn Arthur said:So naming the 2 solutions x we have +x and -x?
To elaborate on what was already said, the two solutions are two different values of x. Also, if ##x = -1 + 2\sqrt 3##, then -x would be ##+1 - 2\sqrt 3##. The latter is not a solution to the quadratic equation you're asking about. The two solutions of the quadratic equation are not negatives of each other: they are conjugates.Martyn Arthur said:So naming the 2 solutions x we have +x and -x?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Complex_numberMartyn Arthur said:Thank you; I need to go away and think about it.
Martyn