How do you use the distributive property to factor 2k^2+4k2k2+4k?

2 Answers
Apr 30, 2017

See the solution process below:

Explanation:

You can remove or factor 2k2k from each term in the expression:

2k^2 + 4k => (2k * k) + (2k * 2) => 2k(k + 2)2k2+4k(2kk)+(2k2)2k(k+2)

Apr 30, 2017

2k(k+2)2k(k+2)

Explanation:

You look for things that are in both parts
Demonstrated by the following example

Consider 2xx7 = 142×7=14

I chose to partition(split) 7 into 3+4

So 2xx72×7 is the same as 2xx(3+4)->(3+4)2×(3+4)(3+4)
" "ul((3+4))larr" Add"
" "6+8

Mathematical convention allows me to write 2xx(3+4) as
2(3+4)

color(brown)("Distributive - everything inside the bracket is multiplied by the 2")
Now this is the same as color(red)(2)color(green)((3+4))

color(green)((color(red)(2)xx3)+(color(red)(2)xx4)) = 6+8 = 14

color(red)("The "2xx" is distributed over every value inside the brackets")
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Using the example as a comparison to 2k^2+4k

Working backwards from this we have:

Example" "14->6color(white)(..)+8
Question" "->2k^2+4k

Example-factor out the 2" "color(white)(..)->2(3+4)
Question-factor out the 2k" "->2k(k+2).....=2k^2+4k

The 2k(k+2) is the consequence of using the distributive property