1 / 10

2.2 Power Function w/ modeling

2.2 Power Function w/ modeling. 2.3 Polynomials of higher degree with modeling. Power function. A power function is any function that can be written in the form: f(x) = kx a , where k and a ≠ 0 Monomial functions: f(x) = k or f(x) = kx n Cubing function: f(x) = x 3

gladys
Download Presentation

2.2 Power Function w/ modeling

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 2.2 Power Function w/ modeling 2.3 Polynomials of higher degree with modeling

  2. Power function • A power function is any function that can be written in the form: f(x) = kxa, where k and a ≠ 0 • Monomial functions: f(x) = k or f(x) = kxn • Cubing function: f(x) = x3 • Square root function: f(x) = x • Higher degree: (standard form) p(x) = anxn + an-1xn-1 + an-2xn-2 +… + a1x + a0

  3. Analyzing Power functions • To do you will find the following: domain range continuous/discontinuous increasing/decreasing intervals even (symmetric over y-axis)/odd function (symmetric over origin) boundedness local extrema (max/min) asymptotes (both VA and HA) end behavior (as it approaches both -∞ & ∞

  4. Example: analyze f(x) = 2x4 • Power: 4, constant: 2 • Domain: (-∞,∞) • Range: [0, ∞) • Continuous • Increasing: [0,∞), decreasing: (-∞, 0] • Even: symmetric w/ respect to y-axis • Bounded below • Local minimum: (0, 0) • Asymptotes: none • End behavior: lim 2x4 = ∞, lim 2x4 = ∞ x -∞ x ∞ (in other words, on the left the graph goes up, on the right the graph goes up) Try one: f(x) = 5x3

  5. Investigating end behavior • When determining end behavior you need to determine if the graph is going to -∞ (down) or ∞ (up) as x -∞ & as x ∞ • Example: graph each function in the window [-5, 5] by [-15, 15] . Describe the end behavior using lim f(x) & lim f(x) x -∞ x ∞ • f(x)=x3+2x2-5x-6: -∞,∞ • Do exploration

  6. Finding 0’s • Find the 0’s of f(x) = 3x3 – x2 -2x • Algebraically: factor 3x3 – x2 -2x = 0 x(3x2 – x -2) = 0 x(3x + 2)(x - 1) = 0 x = 0, 3x + 2 = 0, x – 1= 0 x = 0, x = -2/3, x = 1 • Graphically: graph & find the 0’s (2nd trace #2)

  7. Zeros of Polynomial function • Multiplicity of a Zero If f is a polynomial function and (x-c)m is a factor of f but (x – c)m+1 is not, then c is a zero of multiplicity m of f. • Zero of Odd and Even Multiplicity: If a poly. funct. f has a real 0 c of odd multiplicity, then the graph of f crosses the x-axis at (c, 0) & the value of f changes sign at x=c if a poly. funct. f has a real 0 c of even multiplicity, then the graph doesn’t cross the x-axis at (c, 0) & the value of f doesn’t change sign at x=0

  8. Multiplicity • State the degree, list the 0’s, state the multiplicity of each 0 and what the graph does at each corresponding 0. then sketch the graph by hand (look at exponents: if 1 then crosses, if odd then wiggles, if even then tangent) • Examples: 1)f(x) = x2 + 2x – 8 degree: 2, 0’s: 2, -4, graph: crosses at x=-4 & x= 2 2) f(x) = (x + 2)3(x-1)(x-3)2 Now finish paper

  9. Writing the functions given 0’s • 0, -2, 5 1) rewrite w/ a variable & opposite sign: x(x + 2)(x – 5) 2) simplify x(x2 -3x + -10) x3 – 3x2 – 10x Try one: -6, -4, 5

  10. Homework: • p. 182 #, 28, 29 • p. 193-194 #2-6 even, 25-28 all, 34-38 even, 39-42 all, 49-52 all, 53, 54

More Related