Discriminant and Nature of Roots

The Discriminant

In the quadratic formula:

x=b±b24ac2ax = \frac{-b \pm \sqrt{b^2 - 4ac}}{2a}

The expression under the square root is called the discriminant:

D=b24acD = b^2 - 4ac


Why Does It Matter?

The discriminant tells you what kind of roots you’ll get, without solving.

The sign of D determines the nature of the roots.


Three Cases

Case 1: D>0D > 0

Square root of a positive → Two distinct real roots


Case 2: D=0D = 0

Square root of zero → One repeated real root

The quadratic is a perfect square.


Case 3: D<0D < 0

Square root of a negative → No real roots

The roots are complex numbers.


Summary

DiscriminantNature of roots
D>0D > 0Two distinct real roots
D=0D = 0One repeated real root
D<0D < 0No real roots

Example 1: Two Distinct Roots

Equation: x2+5x+6=0x^2 + 5x + 6 = 0

D=b24ac=2524=1\begin{aligned} D &= b^2 - 4ac \\ &= 25 - 24 \\ &= 1 \end{aligned}

D>0D > 0 → Two distinct real roots.

Solving gives x=2x = -2 and x=3x = -3.


Example 2: One Repeated Root

Equation: x26x+9=0x^2 - 6x + 9 = 0

D=3636=0\begin{aligned} D &= 36 - 36 \\ &= 0 \end{aligned}

D=0D = 0 → One repeated root.

This is a perfect square: (x3)2=0(x - 3)^2 = 0, so x=3x = 3.


Example 3: No Real Roots

Equation: x2+x+1=0x^2 + x + 1 = 0

D=14=3\begin{aligned} D &= 1 - 4 \\ &= -3 \end{aligned}

D<0D < 0 → No real roots.


Bonus: Rational vs Irrational Roots

When D>0D > 0:

  • If DD is a perfect square (1, 4, 9, 16, …) → roots are rational
  • If DD is not a perfect square → roots are irrational

Example: x22x1=0x^2 - 2x - 1 = 0

D=4+4=8D = 4 + 4 = 8

D>0D > 0 but 8 is not a perfect square → roots are irrational (1±21 \pm \sqrt{2}).