In order to factor x ^ 2 + 5x + 6 we must break up the “bx” term into two terms whose coefficients…
add to 5 and multiply to 6
add to 6 and multiply to 5.
add to 1 and multiply to f.
add to 1 and multiply to 5.
The correct answer and explanation is:
The correct answer is: add to 5 and multiply to 6.
To factor the quadratic expression x2+5x+6x^2 + 5x + 6, we start by looking for two numbers that multiply to give the constant term (6) and add up to give the coefficient of the linear term (5).
- The quadratic is in the standard form ax2+bx+cax^2 + bx + c, where:
- a=1a = 1 (the coefficient of x2x^2),
- b=5b = 5 (the coefficient of xx),
- c=6c = 6 (the constant term).
- We need two numbers that meet the following criteria:
- Their product is c=6c = 6,
- Their sum is b=5b = 5.
- The possible pairs of numbers that multiply to 6 are:
- 1 and 6 (since 1×6=61 \times 6 = 6),
- 2 and 3 (since 2×3=62 \times 3 = 6).
- Now, check which pair adds up to 5:
- 1+6=71 + 6 = 7 (not 5),
- 2+3=52 + 3 = 5 (this works).
So, the correct pair is 22 and 33. These numbers both multiply to 6 and add up to 5.
- Now, break up the middle term 5x5x into 2x+3x2x + 3x and rewrite the quadratic as: x2+2x+3x+6.x^2 + 2x + 3x + 6.
- Factor by grouping:
- Group the first two terms: x2+2xx^2 + 2x,
- Group the last two terms: 3x+63x + 6.
- Finally, factor out the common binomial factor (x+2)(x + 2): (x+2)(x+3).(x + 2)(x + 3).
Thus, the factorization of x2+5x+6x^2 + 5x + 6 is (x+2)(x+3)(x + 2)(x + 3).