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Wednesday, February 25, 2015

Algebra ( Period 5)

Factoring the Difference of Two Squares  8-8
Again… remember that FACTORING just UNDOES multiplication

Chapter 8-3 Déjà vu  Foil the following:
(a + b)(a –b) you will get a2 – b2
This is the DIFFERENCE of TWO SQUARES
Now factor   a2 – b2
You undo the FOILING and get
(a + b)(a –b)

Remember:
You MUST have two
DIFFERENT signs because that’s how the MIDDLE term disappears. You will get additive inverses which will become ZERO

How to recognize DIFFERENCE of TWO SQUARES
1) Is it a binomial?
2)
Is it a difference?
3)
Are both terms perfect squares?
If YES to all three questionsàthen you have DIFFERENCE of TWO SQUARES

How to factor the
DIFFERENCE of TWO SQUARES
1) Put a set of double {{HUGS}}  (      )(       )
2)
Find the square root of each term  (SQRT   SQRT) (SQRT   SQRT)
3)
Make one sign positive and one sign negative  (SQRT+SQRT) (SQRT-SQRT)


Of course, they can get more complicated
Always look for a GCF FIRST to pull out

EXAMPLE:
27y2 – 48y4
At first this just looks like a binomial ànot the difference of two squares…
The GCF is 3y2
3y2(9 – 16y2)
WOW—Now we have the
DIFFERENCE of TWO SQUARES
3y2(3 + 4y)(3 - 4y)

Called
FACTORING COMPLETELY because you cannot factor any further
Always check your factoring by distributing or FOILing back!

BTW…  There is NO SUCH THING as the Sum of Two Squares!
a2 + b2 CANNOT be factored!!
but… -b2 + a2 is really a2 –b2 because it is just switched ( commutative)


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