- #1
Ed Quanta
- 297
- 0
Can someone help me prove this?
Where f(z) is a complex polynomial of degree n, and g(z) is a complex polynomial of degree n-1, and f(q)=0, I can't seem to prove
f(z)=(z-q)g(z)
I have substitituted for each of the polynomials and distributed out the z and q terms, but I am unsure how to manipulate this equation. Help anyone?
I am at the point so far where I have
anz^n + an-1z^n-1 +...+a1z+a0= bn-1z^n +bn-2z^n-1+...b1z^2+b0z-q(bn-1z^n-1+bn-2z^n-2+...b0)
But unable to manipulate this further.
Where f(z) is a complex polynomial of degree n, and g(z) is a complex polynomial of degree n-1, and f(q)=0, I can't seem to prove
f(z)=(z-q)g(z)
I have substitituted for each of the polynomials and distributed out the z and q terms, but I am unsure how to manipulate this equation. Help anyone?
I am at the point so far where I have
anz^n + an-1z^n-1 +...+a1z+a0= bn-1z^n +bn-2z^n-1+...b1z^2+b0z-q(bn-1z^n-1+bn-2z^n-2+...b0)
But unable to manipulate this further.