In this section, we have learned the definition of a polynomial, how to evaluate a polynomial, and how to classify a polynomial according to the number of its terms and the degree of its highest exponent.
How to identify the degree and leading coefficient of a polynomial expression
- Find the highest power of the variable (usually x) to determine the degree.
- Identify the term containing the highest power of the variable to find the leading term.
- Identify the coefficient of the leading term.
Degree of a Polynomial
- The degree of a term is the exponent of its variable.
- The degree of a constant is [latex]0[/latex].
- The degree of a polynomial is the highest degree of all its terms.
Glossary:
- Polynomial Algebraic expression that is created by combining numbers and variables using arithmetic operations such as addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, and exponentiation.
- Monomial The basic building block of a polynomial. [latex]a{x}^{m}[/latex], where [latex]a[/latex] is a constant and [latex]m[/latex] is a whole number. A monomial is one term and can be a number, a variable, or the product of a number and variables with an exponent.
- Binomial A polynomial containing exactly two terms.
- Trinomial A polynomial containing exactly three terms.
- Coefficient The number part of a term.
- Leading term The term with the highest degree.
- Leading coefficient The coefficient of the term with the highest degree.
- Standard form When the terms of the polynomial are arranged from the highest degree to the lowest degree.