Home
Class 11
MATHS
if alpha&betaare the roots of the quadra...

if `alpha&beta`are the roots of the quadratic equation `ax^2 + bx + c = 0`, then the quadratic equation `ax^2-bx(x-1)+c(x-1)^2 =0` has roots

Promotional Banner

Similar Questions

Explore conceptually related problems

The roots of a quadratic equation ax^(2) + bx + c = 0 "is"

The roots of the quadratic equations ax^(2)+ bx =0 are:

If alpha,beta are the roots of the quadratic equation ax^(2)+bx+c=0 then alpha beta =

The roots of a quadratic equation ax^2- bx + c = 0, a ne 0 are

If alpha,beta are the roots of the quadratic equation ax^2+bx+c=0 and 3b^2=16ac then

The sum of the roots of the quadratic equations ax^(2) + bx + c=0 is

Let alpha,beta be the roots of the quadratic equation ax^2+bx+c=0 then the roots of the equation a(x+1)^2+b(x+1)(x-2)+c(x-2)^2=0 are:-

If alpha,beta are the roots of the quadratic equation ax^(2)+bx+c=0and3b^(2)=16ac then-

If alpha , beta are the roots of the quadratic equation ax^(2) + bx + c = 0 , then the quadratic equation whose roots are alpha^(3) , beta^(3) is