Stage 12 · Inequalities

12.5  Quadratic Inequalities

Read the answer straight off the parabola: where is the curve above the axis, and where below?

For ages 14–16 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 3 of 4 in this lesson: 12.5.3 The three discriminant cases

12.5.3 The three discriminant cases

How many times the parabola meets the axis is decided by the discriminant Δ = b² − 4ac from Stage 11. For an upward parabola there are exactly three pictures, and each gives a clean rule. Once you know which picture you are in, the answer almost writes itself.

Δ > 0 two roots Δ = 0 one double root Δ < 0 never touches
The three upward pictures: cross twice, just kiss the axis once, or float clear above it.

Δ > 0 — two roots x₁ < x₂

The familiar case. The curve crosses twice, so > 0 gives the outside x < x₁ or x > x₂ and < 0 gives the middle x₁ < x < x₂. Our running example x² − x − 6 is exactly this, with roots −2 and 3.

Δ = 0 — one double root, the curve just touches

Take (x − 2)² = x² − 4x + 4. Here Δ = (−4)² − 4·1·4 = 16 − 16 = 0. A perfect square is never negative, so the curve rides along the axis, dipping down only to touch it at x = 2 and never going below. That single touch point is where it equals 0; everywhere else it is positive. So:

x² − 4x + 4 > 0 ⇒ all x ≠ 2  ·   x² − 4x + 4 < 0 ⇒ no solution.

Δ < 0 — the curve floats above, no roots at all

Take x² + x + 1, where Δ = 1² − 4·1·1 = 1 − 4 = −3 < 0. The parabola never reaches the axis, so for an upward curve it stays entirely positive, every single x. So:

x² + x + 1 > 0 ⇒ all real numbers  ·   x² + x + 1 < 0 ⇒ no solution.

A quick map (upward parabola)
casepicture> 0 solves to< 0 solves to
Δ > 0crosses twiceoutside rootsbetween roots
Δ = 0touches once at rall x ≠ rno solution
Δ < 0floats aboveall realsno solution
Watch out

"No solution" and "all reals" are real, correct answers — do not panic when the roots vanish. If Δ < 0 there is simply nothing between non-existent roots (so < 0 is empty) and the whole line is above the axis (so > 0 is everything). For the touching case Δ = 0, the only subtlety is whether the lone point counts: it is excluded for strict > 0 but included for ≥ 0.

🎮 Try it DISCRIMINANT EXPLORER
Tap a case to load one of the three pinned quadratics. See where the parabola sits relative to the axis, and the solution sets for both > 0 and < 0.
Case
eastmath.com · 12.5 Quadratic Inequalities · 12.5.3 The three discriminant cases