Polynomial Functions

Identifying Polynomial Functions

An oil pipeline bursts in the Gulf of Mexico, causing an oil slick in a roughly circular shape. The slick is currently 24 miles in radius, but that radius is increasing by 8 miles each week. We want to write a formula for the area covered by the oil slick by combining two functions. The radius r of the spill depends on the number of weeks w that have passed. This relationship is linear.

r(w) \equiv 24+8 w

We can combine this with the formula for the area A of a circle.

A(r)=\pi r^{2}

Composing these functions gives a formula for the area in terms of weeks.

\begin{aligned}
A(w) &=A(r(w)) \\
&=A(24+8 w) \\
&=\pi(24+8 w)^{2}
\end{aligned}

Multiplying gives the formula.

A(w)=576 \pi+384 \pi w+64 \pi w^{2}

This formula is an example of a polynomial function. A polynomial function consists of either zero or the sum of a finite number of non-zero terms, each of which is a product of a number, called the coefficient of the term, and a variable raised to a non-negative integer power.


POLYNOMIAL FUNCTIONS

Let n be a non-negative integer. A polynomial function is a function that can be written in the form

f(x)=a_{n} x^{n}+\ldots+a_{2} x^{2}+a_{1} x+a_{0}

This is called the general form of a polynomial function. Each a_{i} is a coefficient and can be any real number, but a_{n} \neq. Each expression a_{i} x^{i} is a term of a polynomial function.


EXAMPLE 4

Identifying Polynomial Functions

Which of the following are polynomial functions?

\begin{aligned}
f(x) &=2 x^{3} \cdot 3 x+4 \\
g(x) &=-x\left(x^{2}-4\right) \\
h(x) &=5 \sqrt{x+2}
\end{aligned}


Solution

The first two functions are examples of polynomial functions because they can be written in the form f(x)=a_{n} x^{n}+\ldots+a_{2} x^{2}+a_{1} x+a_{0}, where the powers are non-negative integers and the coefficients are real numbers.

  • f(x) can be written as f(x)=6 x^{4}+4.
  • g(x) can be written as g(x)=-x^{3}+4 x.
  • h(x) cannot be written in this form and is therefore not a polynomial function.

Source: Rice University, https://openstax.org/books/college-algebra/pages/5-2-power-functions-and-polynomial-functions
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