In elementary algebra, a trinomial is a polynomial consisting of three terms or monomials.
Examples of trinomial expressions
- with variables
- with variables
- with variables
- , the quadratic polynomial in standard form with variables.
- with variables, nonnegative integers and any constants.
- where is variable and constants are nonnegative integers and any constants.
Trinomial equation
A trinomial equation is a polynomial equation involving three terms. An example is the equation studied by Johann Heinrich Lambert in the 18th century.
Some notable trinomials
- The quadratic trinomial in standard form (as from above):
- A special type of trinomial can be factored in a manner similar to quadratics since it can be viewed as a quadratic in a new variable (x below). This form is factored as:
- where
- For instance, the polynomial x + 3x + 2 is an example of this type of trinomial with n = 1. The solution a1 = −2 and a2 = −1 of the above system gives the trinomial factorization:
- x + 3x + 2 = (x + a1)(x + a2) = (x + 2)(x + 1).
- The same result can be provided by Ruffini's rule, but with a more complex and time-consuming process.
See also
- Trinomial expansion
- Monomial
- Binomial
- Multinomial
- Simple expression
- Compound expression
- Sparse polynomial
Notes
- Quadratic expressions are not always trinomials, the expressions' appearance can vary.
References
- "Definition of Trinomial". Math Is Fun. Retrieved 16 April 2016.
- Corless, R. M.; Gonnet, G. H.; Hare, D. E. G.; Jerey, D. J.; Knuth, D. E. (1996). "On the Lambert W Function" (PDF). Advances in Computational Mathematics. 5 (1): 329–359. doi:10.1007/BF02124750.
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