David performed the following mathematical operation:

[tex]\[ 2x - 1 \longdiv { 2x ^ { 2 } + 9x - 5 } \][/tex]

He was left with a remainder of zero. Which of the following statements must be true?

A. [tex]$\frac{1}{2}$[/tex] must be a root of the polynomial [tex]$2x^2+9x-5$[/tex].

B. 5 must be a root of the polynomial [tex]$2x^2+9x-5$[/tex].

C. [tex]$\frac{-1}{2}$[/tex] must be a root of the polynomial [tex]$2x^2+9x-5$[/tex].

D. 0 must be a root of the polynomial [tex]$2x^2+9x-5$[/tex].



Answer :

Let's consider the given polynomial [tex]\(2x^2 + 9x - 5\)[/tex] and the operation performed by David.

When David divided the polynomial [tex]\(2x^2 + 9x - 5\)[/tex] by [tex]\(2x - 1\)[/tex], he was left with a remainder of zero. This means that [tex]\(2x - 1\)[/tex] is a factor of the polynomial [tex]\(2x^2 + 9x - 5\)[/tex].

To determine which of the given options must be true, we need to find the roots of the polynomial [tex]\(2x^2 + 9x - 5\)[/tex].

The roots of a polynomial [tex]\(P(x)\)[/tex] are the values of [tex]\(x\)[/tex] that satisfy the equation [tex]\(P(x) = 0\)[/tex].

Given the polynomial [tex]\(2x^2 + 9x - 5\)[/tex], the roots are the solutions to the equation:
[tex]\[ 2x^2 + 9x - 5 = 0 \][/tex]

The roots of this polynomial are:
[tex]\[ x = -5 \quad \text{and} \quad x = \frac{1}{2} \][/tex]

Now, let's evaluate each of the statements based on the roots we found:

A. [tex]\(\frac{1}{2}\)[/tex] must be a root of the polynomial [tex]\(2x^2 + 9x - 5\)[/tex].

This is true because [tex]\(\frac{1}{2}\)[/tex] is one of the roots we found.

B. 5 must be a root of the polynomial [tex]\(2x^2 + 9x - 5\)[/tex].

This is false because the roots we found are [tex]\(-5\)[/tex] and [tex]\(\frac{1}{2}\)[/tex], not 5.

C. [tex]\(\frac{-1}{2}\)[/tex] must be a root of the polynomial [tex]\(2x^2 + 9x - 5\)[/tex].

This is false because the roots we found are [tex]\(-5\)[/tex] and [tex]\(\frac{1}{2}\)[/tex], not [tex]\(\frac{-1}{2}\)[/tex].

D. 0 must be a root of the polynomial [tex]\(2x^2 + 9x - 5\)[/tex].

This is false because the roots we found are [tex]\(-5\)[/tex] and [tex]\(\frac{1}{2}\)[/tex], not 0.

Therefore, the correct and true statement is:

A. [tex]\(\frac{1}{2}\)[/tex] must be a root of the polynomial [tex]\(2x^2 + 9x - 5\)[/tex].