blackops23
Member
- Joined
- Dec 15, 2010
- Messages
- 428
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2011
Hi guys, this is the question I had to do:
Q. Draw careful sketches of the following, clearly showing asymptotes. DO NOT USE CALCULUS.
(g). y= (2x^2 + 4x + 3)/(x^2 - 1)
So for this question, there's an asymptote at y=2, and x=1 and x=-1, no x-intercepts, and passes through (0,-3).
The guide graph shows that when x< -1, graph IS ABOVE x-axis
For -1<(x)<1 graph is BELOW X-AXIS
For x> 1, graph is ABOVE X-AXIS
---------------------------------------------
So it seemed like a fairly simple graph with the graph being greater than 2, at x<1 and x>1 and below 0 for -1<(x)<1
So I drew the graph approaching the asymptotes FROM ABOVE y=2.
However to my surprise, for x<1, the graph cut y=2 and approached the asymptote from below as x--> -inf. (so there was a minima at (-2,1))
(If anyone has graphing software, sketch the graph to know what I mean)...
So how am I supposed to know whether a graph cuts the asymptotes and approaches it from the other side? Normally graphs don't act that weirdly, they approach the asymptotes like normal graphs. Is there any special feature about these particular graphs that make it cross the asymptote and approach it from the other side??
Or should I just sub in 10^10 and -10^10 for every single graph I come across?
Advice would be immensely appreciated.
Q. Draw careful sketches of the following, clearly showing asymptotes. DO NOT USE CALCULUS.
(g). y= (2x^2 + 4x + 3)/(x^2 - 1)
So for this question, there's an asymptote at y=2, and x=1 and x=-1, no x-intercepts, and passes through (0,-3).
The guide graph shows that when x< -1, graph IS ABOVE x-axis
For -1<(x)<1 graph is BELOW X-AXIS
For x> 1, graph is ABOVE X-AXIS
---------------------------------------------
So it seemed like a fairly simple graph with the graph being greater than 2, at x<1 and x>1 and below 0 for -1<(x)<1
So I drew the graph approaching the asymptotes FROM ABOVE y=2.
However to my surprise, for x<1, the graph cut y=2 and approached the asymptote from below as x--> -inf. (so there was a minima at (-2,1))
(If anyone has graphing software, sketch the graph to know what I mean)...
So how am I supposed to know whether a graph cuts the asymptotes and approaches it from the other side? Normally graphs don't act that weirdly, they approach the asymptotes like normal graphs. Is there any special feature about these particular graphs that make it cross the asymptote and approach it from the other side??
Or should I just sub in 10^10 and -10^10 for every single graph I come across?
Advice would be immensely appreciated.