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The of a quadratic function are the x-values where the crosses the x-axis and the y-value equals

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Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
The zeros (also called roots or x-intercepts) of a quadratic function are the x-values where its graph crosses the x-axis — at those points the y-value equals 0.
Example: for f(x) = x^2 − 5x + 6, the zeros are x = 2 and x = 3 because f(2) = f(3) = 0.