Zeroes are where a graph crosses the x-axis — and the coefficients secretly tell you their sum and product before you even solve. See it all move on a grapher you control.
Play with it
Drag a, b, c in p(x) = ax² + bx + c. The zeroes (orange dots) are where the curve meets the x-axis — and watch how sum of zeroes = −b/a and product = c/a hold every time.
Learn
A polynomial is an expression built from a variable (say x) using only whole-number powers, like 4x³ − 2x + 7. Each piece (4x³, −2x, 7) is a term, and the numbers multiplying the powers of x are the coefficients.
The degree is the highest power of x. It names the polynomial:
A zero of a polynomial p(x) is any value of x for which p(x) = 0. Finding zeroes usually means factorising and setting each factor to zero.
A polynomial of degree n has at most n zeroes. So a quadratic has at most 2, a cubic at most 3.
This is the big idea of the chapter: a zero is exactly where the graph crosses the x-axis (because there, y = p(x) = 0). So you can read the zeroes straight off a graph.
Use the grapher near the top of the page — drag the sliders and watch the orange zero-dots appear, merge, and vanish.
For a quadratic polynomial ax² + bx + c with zeroes α and β, the coefficients tell you their sum and product directly:
Find a quadratic polynomial whose zeroes are −3 and 4.
Why this matters
Quadratics aren't abstract — every thrown ball, every satellite dish, every profit-maximising business runs on the curve you're studying.
Throw a ball, shoot a basketball, switch on a fountain — the path is the graph of a quadratic, h(x) = −ax² + bx + c. Its zeroes are exactly where the object leaves and hits the ground, and the peak is the vertex. Sports analysts and game engines compute trajectories with this every day.
Zeroes & vertexA parabola has a magic property: every signal arriving parallel to its axis bounces to a single focus. That is why a satellite dish, a telescope mirror and a car headlight are all parabolic — weak signals get gathered to one point, or a small bulb gets spread into a strong beam.
Parabola propertyRevenue often follows a downward parabola; its vertex gives the price that maximises profit.
The main cable of a suspension bridge hangs in a near-perfect parabola — engineers model it as a polynomial.
Polynomial (Bézier) curves draw the smooth shapes in fonts, logos and game graphics.
Profit optimisation, bridge cables, design curves and more — each explained with a diagram. Free to unlock.
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Modelled on CBSE's competency pattern — MCQ, assertion–reason and case-study items.
Interactive grapher hand-built for trykarkedekho. Content from the rationalised NCERT Class 10 Maths syllabus (ncert.nic.in).
Buffyyour study buddyBuffy is an AI helper and can be wrong — always check your NCERT textbook.