How do you write a quadratic equation with a root of -3+2i?

1 Answer
Jun 21, 2017

x^2 + 6x + 13

Explanation:

If one root is -3 + 2i, then another root must be -3 - 2i. (When you solve the quadratic equation, there is a +- in front of the square root, so roots always come in pairs.)

We can use the sum and product of the roots to create a quadratic equation.

1. Find the sum of the roots:

(-3 + 2i) + (-3 - 2i)
= -3 + 2i - 3 - 2i
= -3 + cancel(2i) - 3 - cancel(2i)
= -6

2. Find the product of the roots:

(-3 + 2i) * (-3 - 2i)
= 9 + 6i - 6i -4i^2
= 9 + cancel(6i) - cancel(6i) -4(-1)
= 13

3. Use the formula x^2 - Sx + P and plug in the sum for S and the product for P.

x^2 - (-6)x + 13
x^2 + 6x + 13

This is your quadratic equation!