asked 213k views
0 votes
Can someone explain multiplicity of a zero?

2 Answers

6 votes
The multiplicity is the number of "times" a zero exists.

So, if the Function would be (x-3)(x-3)(x-1)=0
The zeros would be 3 (with a multiplicity of 2), and 1.

So any time you see the same factor more than once, it has a multiplicity greater than 1.
answered
User Fdomig
by
8.0k points
4 votes

Multiplicity refers to the exponents of the factors. For example:

x³(x + 1)(x + 2)²(x² + 1) = 0

x: has a multiplicity of 3 because its exponent is 3

x + 1: has a multiplicity of 1 because its exponent is 1: (x + 1)¹

x + 2: has a multiplicity of 2 because its exponent is 2

x² + 1: has a multiplicity of 1 because its exponent is 1: (x² + 1)¹

Hope this helped!

answered
User Paul Solt
by
8.4k points

No related questions found

Welcome to Qamnty — a place to ask, share, and grow together. Join our community and get real answers from real people.