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Mathematics 10 Online
OpenStudy (anonymous):

factor 15q^4+61p^3q+4p^2q^2

OpenStudy (anonymous):

you can factor out a q from each term

OpenStudy (anonymous):

\[15q^4+61p^3q+4p^2q^2\]\[q(15q^3+61p^3+4p^2q)\]

OpenStudy (anonymous):

I'm having trouble seeing anything else you can do

OpenStudy (anonymous):

i don't know im lost with these

OpenStudy (anonymous):

@ChmE that's correct, nothing else can be done to the polynomial...you can only pull out \(q\) :)

OpenStudy (anonymous):

@hannalafave factoring is mostly about finding out what each term has in common.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

it says its wrong i dont know

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Are you sure you copied the question down correctly?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

no i got it thanks =)

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