Further Solving Quadratic Equations (Hidden Quadratics) (Edexcel International AS Maths: Pure 1)

Revision Note

Paul

Author

Paul

Last updated

Did this video help you?

Further Solving Quadratic Equations (Hidden Quadratics)

What are hidden quadratic equations?

  • Hidden quadratic equations are quadratics written in terms of a function f left parenthesis x right parenthesis
  • A normal quadratic appears in the form a x squared plus b x plus c equals 0
  • Whereas a hidden quadratic appears in the form a open square brackets f left parenthesis x right parenthesis close square brackets squared plus b open square brackets f left parenthesis x right parenthesis close square brackets plus c equals 0
  • This might look complicated but it simply means x has been replaced by f left parenthesis x right parenthesis
  • e.g. sin squared space x plus 2 sin space x minus 3 equals 0 is just the hidden quadratic of x squared plus 2 x minus 3 equals 0 where f left parenthesis x right parenthesis space equals space sin space x

How to solve hidden quadratic equations

  • First rearrange the function into the form a open square brackets f left parenthesis x right parenthesis close square brackets squared plus b open square brackets f left parenthesis x right parenthesis close square brackets plus c equals 0
  • Replacing the function and solving the 'normal' quadratic first
  • Then substitute the function back into the solutions to solve the original quadraticFurther Solving of Quadratic Equations Notes Diagram 2, A Level & AS Level Pure Maths Revision Notes

Worked example

Further Solving of Quadratic Equations Example, A Level & AS Level Pure Maths Revision Notes

You've read 0 of your 5 free revision notes this week

Sign up now. It’s free!

Join the 100,000+ Students that ❤️ Save My Exams

the (exam) results speak for themselves:

Did this page help you?

Paul

Author: Paul

Expertise: Maths

Paul has taught mathematics for 20 years and has been an examiner for Edexcel for over a decade. GCSE, A level, pure, mechanics, statistics, discrete – if it’s in a Maths exam, Paul will know about it. Paul is a passionate fan of clear and colourful notes with fascinating diagrams – one of the many reasons he is excited to be a member of the SME team.