How do you find all the zeros of f(x)=x^4-8x^3+17x^2-8x+16 ?

1 Answer
May 1, 2016

Zeros at x in {4,i,-i}

Explanation:

Given
color(white)("XXX")color(red)(1)x^4-8x^3+17x^2-8x+color(blue)(16)

By the rational root theorem, we know that any rational roots must be factors of color(blue)(16)/color(red)(1) =16
which implies they must be in the set {+-1,+-2,+-4,+-16}

Testing each of these possibilities give a zero at (an only at) x=4

If we divide x^4-8x^3+17x^2-8x+15 by (x-4) (using synthetic or long polynomial division)
we get factors (x-4)(x^3-4x^2+x-4)

Again, applying the factor theorem of x^3-4x^2+x-4)
we find the only zero at x=4 (again).

Dividing x^3-4x^2+x-4 by (x-4)
we can re-factor as (x-4)(x-4)(x^2+1)

(x^2+1) has no Real zeros but can be factored as (x+i)(x-i) to get complex zeros at +-i