find K so that the equation KX^2 + X + 4K = 0
in Algebra 1 Answers by

Your answer

Your name to display (optional):
Privacy: Your email address will only be used for sending these notifications.
Anti-spam verification:
To avoid this verification in future, please log in or register.

1 Answer

In this case, k is going to depend on x.

solve for k, so subtract x from both sides kx^2 + 4k = -x

factor out a k, so k(x^2 + 4) = -x

then divide both sides by (x^2 + 4) so k= -x/(x^2 + 4)

there isn't a "nice" answer to this
by Level 5 User (11.9k points)

Related questions

1 answer
1 answer
asked Nov 27, 2014 in Algebra 1 Answers by Jennifer A. Cascaño Level 12 User (101k points) | 1.7k views
1 answer
asked Jun 18, 2014 in Calculus Answers by freshman | 2.7k views
1 answer
asked Jan 30, 2012 in Algebra 1 Answers by anonymous | 857 views
1 answer
asked Sep 14, 2022 in Algebra 1 Answers by Marissa Level 1 User (160 points) | 531 views
1 answer
1 answer
asked Apr 20, 2014 in Algebra 2 Answers by anonymous | 570 views
1 answer
1 answer
asked Sep 20, 2013 in Calculus Answers by anonymous | 1.2k views
1 answer
1 answer
asked Jul 20, 2013 in order of operations by santosh | 477 views
Welcome to MathHomeworkAnswers.org, where students, teachers and math enthusiasts can ask and answer any math question. Get help and answers to any math problem including algebra, trigonometry, geometry, calculus, trigonometry, fractions, solving expression, simplifying expressions and more. Get answers to math questions. Help is always 100% free!
87,542 questions
99,768 answers
2,417 comments
504,733 users