Difference between revisions of "Newton's Sums"
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Which gives us our desired solutions, <math>\boxed{1}</math> and <math>\boxed{-127}</math>. | Which gives us our desired solutions, <math>\boxed{1}</math> and <math>\boxed{-127}</math>. | ||
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| + | ==Practice== | ||
| + | 2019 AMc 12A #17 | ||
==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||
Revision as of 23:07, 9 February 2019
Newton sums give us a clever and efficient way of finding the sums of roots of a polynomial raised to a power. They can also be used to derive several factoring identities.
Contents
Statement
Consider a polynomial
of degree
,
Let
have roots
. Define the following sums:
Newton sums tell us that,
(Define
for
.)
We also can write:
etc., where
denotes the
-th elementary symmetric sum.
Proof
Let
be the roots of a given polynomial
. Then, we have that
Thus,
Multiplying each equation by
, respectively,
Sum,
Therefore,
Example
For a more concrete example, consider the polynomial
. Let the roots of
be
and
. Find
and
.
Newton Sums tell us that:
Solving, first for
, and then for the other variables, yields,
Which gives us our desired solutions,
and
.
Practice
2019 AMc 12A #17