use the rational zeros theorem to list all possible rational zeros for the given function
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Using the theorem we look at the coefficient of the highest power term, and we can see it's -4, which has factors 1*(-4), 4*(-1), 2*(-2), -2*2. Then we look at the constant term, 6: 1*6, -1*(-6), 2*3, -2*(-3). The first set of factors we call the q set and the second set the p set. The rational roots, if any, will be given by p/q, where p and q are members of their respective sets. The set of p/q values is: 1/4, 1/2, 3/4, 1, 3/2, 2, 3, 6, in positive or negative form. We can now try out all possible roots by substitution (the x,y values are shown in pairs from smallest to largest values of x):

 -6 -5058; -3 -285; -2 -42; -3/2 -4.5; -1 7; -3/4 7.922; -1/2 7.5; -1/4 6.672;

1/4 5.672; 1/2 5.5; 3/4 4.922; 1 3; 3/2 -10.5; 2 -50; 3 -297; 6 -5082

Although none of these produce zeroes, we can see by the sign changes where the irrational roots lie: between -3/2 and -1; between 1 and 3/2. (Actual values are -1.3789 and 1.1829 approx.)

by Top Rated User (1.2m points)

Given f(x)=-4x^4+3x^2-2x+6
f(x)=x(-4x^3+3x-2)+6
x=-1.37
x=1.182
x=0.09801-0.9539i
x=0.09801+0.95393i

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by Level 8 User (30.1k points)

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