Ask a New Question

Asked by John

Find the number of integer quadruples (a,b,c,d) with 0\leq a,b,c,d \leq 100, such that a and b are the roots of the quadratic equation x^2-cx+d=0, while c and d are the roots of the quadratic equation x^2-ax+b.
12 years ago

Answers

Related Questions

Find the solutions to each quadratic by factoring x^2+3x-18=0 3x^2-9x=o x^2-10x+21=0 5x... 1. Find the equation for a quadratic function whose vertex is (2,5) and whose graph contains the poi... Find the area in the first quadrant bounded by the arc of the circle described by the polar equation... find the area in the first quadrant bounded above by y=sinx, below by the x-axis, and to the right b... Find the area in the first quadrant bounded by the curve y=(9-x)^1/2 and the x- and y-axis. is 0 a whole number, integer, rational, and real number? 1.A number is not an integer. What type of number can it be? 2. Katie said, "negative numbers are i... Find the number of ordered quadruples of positive integers (a,b,c,d ) such that ab +cd =10. 5. Find the roots for each quadratic function a) f(x) = 3x2 - 16x + 20 b) f(x) = 2x2-x -10 c) f(x... What number is an integer? .888, square root of 11, -17
Ask a New Question
Archives Contact Us Privacy Policy Terms of Use