Home
Class 11
MATHS
If roots of the equation a x^2+b x+c=0 ...

If roots of the equation `a x^2+b x+c=0` are `alphaa n dbeta` , find the equation whose roots are `1/alpha,1/beta` (ii) `-alpha,-beta` (iii) `(1-alpha)/(1+alpha),(1-beta)/(1+beta)`

Promotional Banner

Similar Questions

Explore conceptually related problems

The roots of the equation x^(2)+6x-4=0 are alpha, beta . Find the quadratic equation whose roots area alpha^(2) and beta^(2)

The roots of the equation x^(2)+6x-4=0 are alpha, beta . Find the quadratic equation whose roots area (2)/(alpha) and (2)/(beta)

The roots of the equation x^(2)+6x-4=0 are alpha, beta . Find the quadratic equation whose roots area (alpha^(2)beta) and beta^(2)alpha

The roots of the equation 2x^(2)-7x+5=0 are alpha and beta . Without solving the root find (1)/(alpha)+(1)/(beta)

If alpha,beta are the roots of lthe equation 2x ^2-3x-6=0, find the equation whose roots are alpha^2+2a n dbeta^2+2.

If alpha, beta , gamma are the roots of the equation x^3-3x+2=0 then the equation whose roots are 1/alpha,1/beta,1/gamma is :