(4)
Given the polynomial x^5 + ax^4 + bx^3 + cx^2 + dx + e, it has exactly two inflection points if 2a^2 > 5b.
Hint: An nth degree polynomial has n real roots iff
.
Take this as a given. It's a result of the Cauchy-Schwarz Inequality.
By the way, this is a beautiful problem =)
Hmm... I take this back.
No fifth degree polynomial can have exactly two inflection points. This is because its second derivative can't have two real roots (each with a multiplicity of 1). It can either have three real roots or one real root and two complex roots. And in a cubic function the number of real roots you have corresponds to the number of points where the polynomial changes sign.
The way I got my first solution was by solving for when the fifth degree polynomial and its second derivative satisfy
.
The problem is that when the second derivative has three real roots, it has
three inflection points, not two.
The reason I said this problem was beautiful is that it worked out so that if you have a fifth degree polynomial with five real roots, then its second derivative will have three real roots. I suspect that a the ith derivative of an nth degree polynomial with n real roots has n - i real roots, but I'm going to get around to proving it in another thread.