Yes, thanks for catching my errors.
Yes, thanks for catching my errors.
I wrote my comment too hastily, you are correct. My comment has been edited, probably while you were typing yours.
Ah yep, I wrote my reply too hastily. It is fixed (Edit: I also missed where it specified b is an integer).
(edit: I typed this up not as a response to OP, but for anyone who was curious about this but didn’t remember or never learned enough math to solve this for themselves. It had errors but I fixed them (I think, I just woke up and I’m tired of re-reading this comment). Sharing is imperative, and not everyone has had the chance to develop an appreciation for math).
Here I come to explain the joke.
The question asks for what values of b produce no real solutions.
Quadratics (this is the type of equation this is) have two, one or no real real roots. (If we set x to some arbitrary number and the equation is equal to zero, we say x is a root of the equation. A real number is anything we traditionally call a number, like 2, 1/4, -248957.666667 and pi).
So we need to find where it has only one real solution. Quadratics of the form (x-k)^2 = 0 have only one real solution, that solution is k.
So, since 169 = 13^2 we can easily find the b that produces this (this part isn’t necessary as part of the solution, I include it in case it helps someone understand):
-1(x-13)^2 = 0
-1(x^2 -26x + 169) = 0
-x^2 +26x - 169 = 0
If we apply the quadratic formula, we can find what values of b produce imaginary roots. I’m not going to type the whole thing out, we just need to know what is happening under the “square root” part of the quadratic formula, the radicand:
sqrt(b^2 - 4 * -1 * 169)
sqrt(b^2 - 676)
sqrt(676) is 26, by the way. So any value between 0 and 26 (or 0 and -26) will produce a negative value inside the radicand. We can’t take a square root of a negative number (unless you don’t mind that your solution has complex numbers), so any -26 < b < 26 will give us an equation without real solutions.
Therefore, the least value of b is a value of b greater than -26, but less than 0. Since the question specifies it is an integer, that number is -25.
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Everyone knows those rules don’t apply when youre dunking on the instances with opinions outside of the US state department’s approved overton window.
It is a reference to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade. Gen alpha is very interested in the history of international trade and the rise of the global market economy.
Its a simple question about an unsourced graph. Don’t you think you’re being a bit too adversarial?
Not everyone is here pushing an agenda, some people use the comments to talk to other people.
….theres a dead bug on the counter and you call this nigh impeccable?
I’m never eating dinner at your house
This conversation is great.
(in case it does not load there is a picture in this reply)