Day 7: Bending the Line (Quadratics) | Secondary Stage (Grades 9 & 10) | Apex Institute of Maths and Sciences

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Day 7: Bending the Line (Quadratics) | Secondary Stage (Grades 9 & 10) | Apex Institute of Maths and Sciences

Day 7: Bending the Line (Quadratics) 🎒

Secondary Stage (Grades 9 & 10) | Apex Institute of Maths and Sciences

🎯 1. Concept: The Power of Two

Welcome to Day 7! Up until now, we have only worked with “Linear Equations” (like y = 3x + 2). On a graph, they always draw a perfectly straight line.

But what happens if you add an exponent to the ‘x’? Welcome to Quadratic Equations! A quadratic equation is any equation where the highest power of x is x2 (x-squared).

Because of that little exponent, the straight line BENDS into a beautiful U-shaped curve called a Parabola.

πŸ’‘ 2. The Standard Form

Every quadratic equation can be arranged into this master blueprint called the Standard Form:

ax2 + bx + c = 0

  • a is the coefficient of x2. (Rule: ‘a’ can NEVER be zero! If it is, the x2 disappears and it goes back to being a boring straight line.)
  • b is the coefficient of the normal x.
  • c is the constant (the regular number with no x attached).

Example: In the equation 2x2 – 5x + 7 = 0, a=2, b=-5, and c=7.

🌍 3. Math in Our Daily Life

You see parabolas and quadratics every single day, especially in physics!

Scenario 1 (Sports & Gravity): When you throw a basketball into the hoop, it doesn’t travel in a straight line. It goes up, curves, and comes back down. The path of the ball is a perfect Parabola, driven entirely by a quadratic equation!

Scenario 2 (Engineering): Look at a satellite dish or the shiny mirrors inside a car’s headlights. They are built using quadratic curves because parabolas have a special “focus point” that traps and shoots out light and radio waves perfectly.

πŸ“ 4. Analytical Tasks

Open your math journal and complete these setup tasks:

  • Task A: The Lineup: Take the mixed-up equation 5x + 3x2 = 10. Rearrange it into perfect Standard Form (ax2 + bx + c = 0). What are the values of a, b, and c?
  • Task B: Parabola Hunt: Look around your house or outside. Find 3 things that are shaped like a U-curve (parabola) and write them down (e.g., a skipping rope held by two people, the arch of a bridge).

βœ… 5. Day 7 Application Test

Can you spot the quadratics? This quiz gets progressively harder, ending with IIT-JEE foundation logic. Select your answers below and click submit.

Easy
1. What makes an equation “Quadratic”?
Solution: The defining feature of a quadratic equation is the squared term (x2).
Easy
2. What is the standard form of a quadratic equation?
Solution: The standard form aligns the terms from highest power to lowest: ax2 + bx + c = 0.
Easy
3. When you graph a quadratic equation, what shape does it make?
Solution: The x2 bends the graph into a beautiful U-curve known as a Parabola.
Easy
4. A linear equation usually has 1 solution. How many solutions (roots) does a quadratic equation usually have?
Solution: Because a parabola is a U-shape, it usually crosses the x-axis twice, giving it 2 distinct solutions!
Medium
5. Look at this equation: 4x2 – 7x + 9 = 0. What is the value of ‘b’?
Solution: ‘b’ is the number attached to the regular ‘x’. Make sure you include the sign in front of it! b = -7.
Medium
6. Which of the following is NOT a quadratic equation?
Solution: 8x – 12 = 0 has no x2 term. That makes it a Linear equation, not a Quadratic!
Medium
7. In the standard form ax2 + bx + c = 0, why is there a strict rule that ‘a’ can NEVER equal 0?
Solution: 0 multiplied by anything is 0. If a=0, the x2 disappears, leaving just bx + c = 0 (a straight line!).
Medium
8. If an equation is written as x2 = 16, what are the TWO possible solutions for x?
Solution: Both 4 Γ— 4 = 16, AND (-4) Γ— (-4) = 16! That is why quadratics have two roots.
Hard
9. 🧠 Puzzle: Look at this equation: x(x + 5) = 14. At first glance, there is no x2. Is this a quadratic equation?
Solution: Yes! If you expand the brackets by multiplying the outside ‘x’ by the inside terms, you get x2 + 5x = 14. A hidden quadratic!
Hard
10. 🧠 Graph Logic: You draw a parabola on a graph. The curve comes down and crosses the horizontal x-axis at x = 3 and x = -1. What do we call these specific crossing points in Algebra?
Solution: The spots where the parabola cuts through the x-axis (where y=0) are the answers to the equation! We call them the Roots or the Zeros.
⚠️ Please answer all 10 questions before submitting!

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