Polynomial Functions: End Behavior, Roots, and the Rational Root Theorem
The Fundamental Theorem of Algebra guarantees a polynomial of degree n has n roots. Master the Rational Root Theorem, end-behavior rules, and you'll factor polynomials too big for plain trial and error.
Higher degrees, same logic
Algebra 1 factored quadratics. Algebra 2 takes you up to degree 5 and beyond. The Fundamental Theorem of Algebra says any degree-n polynomial has exactly n roots (counting multiplicity, including complex roots).
End behavior depends on degree and leading coefficient
Identify end behavior
What is the end behavior of f(x) = −2x⁴ + 3x² + 5?
Open the question →A degree-n polynomial has up to n real roots
A polynomial of degree n has exactly n roots (real + complex, counting multiplicity). At most n of them can be real.
Maximum real roots
A polynomial has a degree of 5. What is the maximum number of real roots it can have?
Open the question →The Rational Root Theorem
For a polynomial with integer coefficients, every rational root has the form ±(factor of constant term)/(factor of leading coefficient).
List the candidates
According to the Rational Root Theorem, possible rational roots of x³ − 4x² + x + 6 = 0 must come from:
Open the question →Synthetic division (the speed factor)
Synthetic division is a streamlined way to divide a polynomial by (x − r). If the remainder is 0, then r is a root and the quotient is the factor you want.
3-second recap
- Degree n → at most n real roots, exactly n total (counting complex).
- End behavior: even/odd × +/− gives 4 cases.
- Rational Root Theorem: candidates = ±(const factors)/(leading factors).
- Synthetic division: faster than long division; remainder 0 means you found a root.