# Quadratic Equation A5
Source: algebrica.org - CC BY-NC 4.0
https://algebrica.org/exercises/quadratic-equation-a-5/
Fetched from algebrica.org test 3469; source modified 2025-03-06T16:13:23.
Solve the [quadratic equation](../quadratic-equations.md):
\\[
2x^2 + 10x + 11 = 0
\\]
* * *
The equation is already reduced to the standard form \\(ax^2+bx+c= 0\\). We can substitute the coefficients \\(a=2, b=10, c=11\\) into the [quadratic formula](../quadratic-formula.md):
\\[
x\_{1,2} = \\frac{{-b \\pm \\sqrt{{b^2-4ac}}}}{{2a}}
\\]
We obtain:
\\[
x\_{1,2} = \\frac{{-10 \\pm \\sqrt{{10^2-4(2)(11)}}}}{{2(2)}}
\\]
* * *
In this case, the discriminant \\(\\Delta\\) is \\(\\geq 0\\) so the equation admits two distinct real solutions.
\\begin{align\*} x\_{1,2} &= \\frac{{-10 \\pm \\sqrt{{100 - 88}}}}{4}\\[0.6em] &= \\frac{{-10 \\pm \\sqrt{{12}}}}{4}\\[0.6em] &= \\frac{{-10 \\pm \\sqrt{{3 \\cdot 2^2}}}}{4}\\[0.6em] &= \\frac{{-10 \\pm 2 \\sqrt{{3}}}}{4}\\\\ \\end{align\*}
* * *
Finally, by performing the calculations, we obtain:
\\[
x\_{1,2} = \\frac{-5 \\pm \\sqrt{3}}{2}
\\]
The solution to the equation is:
\\[
x\_1=\\frac{-5 + \\sqrt{3}}{2} \\quad x\_2=\\frac{-5 - \\sqrt{3}}{2}
\\]
* * *
Remember that the [discriminant](../quadratic-formula.md) is crucial in determining the nature and number of solutions of quadratic equations.
- If \\( b^2 - 4ac > 0\\), the quadratic equation has two distinct real solutions.
\\[
S = \\{x\_1, x\_2\\} \\quad x\_1, x\_2 \\in \\mathbb{R} \\quad x\_1 \\neq x\_2
\\]
- If \\( b^2 - 4ac = 0\\), the quadratic equation has two coincident real solutions.
\\[
S = \\{x\\} \\quad x \\in \\mathbb{R} \\quad x = x\_1 = x\_2
\\]
- If \\( b^2 - 4ac = < 0\\), the quadratic equation has no real solutions. Instead, it gives rise to complex solutions characterized by imaginary components.
\\[
\\nexists \\hspace{10px} x \\in \\mathbb{R}
\\]