1 / 26

PRESENTED BY AKILI THOMAS, DANA STA. ANA, & MICHAEL BRISCO

PRESENTED BY AKILI THOMAS, DANA STA. ANA, & MICHAEL BRISCO. Graphing Quadratic funtions in Standard Form. Section 4.1. A quadratic function is a function that can be written in the standard form y = ax 2 +bx+c where a doesn’t equal 0 . The graph of a quadratic function is a parabola.

kagami
Download Presentation

PRESENTED BY AKILI THOMAS, DANA STA. ANA, & MICHAEL BRISCO

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. PRESENTED BY AKILI THOMAS, DANA STA. ANA, & MICHAEL BRISCO

  2. Graphing Quadratic funtions in Standard Form Section 4.1

  3. A quadratic function is a function that can be written in the standard form y = ax2+bx+c where a doesn’t equal 0. The graph of a quadratic function is a parabola. Graph Quadratic Functions in Standard Form 4.1

  4. -Graphy= 2x2-8x+6 -Step 1Identify the coeficients of the function. The coefficients are a=2, b=-8, and c=6. Because a is greater than 0, The parabola opens up. -Step 2Find the vertex. Calculate the x coordinate. X=-b/2a=-(-8)/(2(2))=2 Then find the y- coordinate of the vertex.              Y= 2(2)-8(2)+6=-2 So the vertex is (2,-2).Plot this point. Graph a function of the form y= ax2+bx+c

  5. -Step 3Draw the axis of symmetry x=2 -Step 4Identify the y-intercept c, which is 6. Plot the point (0,6). Then reflect this point in the axis of symmetry to plot another point, (4,6).

  6. -Step 5 Evaluate the function for another value of x, such as x=1. y=2(1)-8(1)+6=0 Plot the point (1,0) and its reflection (3,0) in the axis of symmetry. -Step 6 Draw a parabola through the plotted points.

  7. Section 4.3 Solving x2+bx+c=0 by factoring Example Solve x2-13x-48=0. Use factoring to solve for x.     x2-13x-48=0                            Write original equation. (x-16)(x+3)=0                          Factor. x-16=0    or    x+3=0                Zero product property. x=16    or    x=-3                      Solve for x.

  8. Properties ofSquare Roots Product Property = √ab = √a × √b Example = √18 = √9 × √2 = 3√2 Quotient Property = √a÷b = (√a÷√b) Example = √2÷25 = (√2÷√25) = (√2÷5)

  9. EXAMPLE 1 Use properties of square roots Simplify the expression. 72 = 1. 36 2 =    6 2 6 = = 2. 6 24 6 4 =   2 4

  10. Use properties of square roots GUIDED PRACTICE GUIDED PRACTICE 16 (√16÷√144) = 144 4 12 49 121 (√49 ÷ √121) = 7 11

  11. Rationalizing the Denominator Form of the denominator Multiply numerator and denominator by: √b √b a + √b a - √b a - √b a + √b

  12. EXAMPLE 2 Rationalize denominators of fractions 5 5 1. = 2 2 5 2 = 2 2 10 2 =

  13. Solving Quadratic Equations • You can use square roots to solve quadratic equations: • If s>0, then x2 = s has two real number solutions: • X = √s and x = -√s • The condensed form of these solutions is: • X =±√s

  14. p² + 6 = 127 3x² + 9 = 117 - 6 = - 6 - 9 = - 9 p² =√121 3x² = 108 ÷ 3 p = ± 11 x² = √36 x = ± 6 Solving Quadratic Equations

  15. Ex.1 10- (6 +7i)+ 4i 10-6-7i+4i 4-3i First, simplify the expression Then, grouped the like terms together Finally, write the answer in the correct form

  16. Ex. 1 (9-2i)(-4+7i) -36+63i +8i-14i² -36+71i-14(-1) -36+71i+14 -22+71i First, multiply using FOIL Secondly, turn i²= -1 Then, simplify, combine like terms Finally, write the answer in the standard form

  17. Distributive Property: (2 + 3i) • (4 + 5i) = 2(4 + 5i) + 3i(4 + 5i = 8 + 10i + 12i + 15 = 8 + 22i + 1  = 8 + 22i -1  = -7 + 22i    Be sure to replace i2 with(-1) and proceed with the simplification.  Answer should be in a + bi form.

  18. In 4.5, you solved equations of the form x² = k by finding square roots. Also, you learned how to solve quadratic equations. • In 4.7, you will learn the form, x² +bx. Also, you will learn how to complete the square. You have to add (b÷2) ² to make a perfect square trinomial. Completing the square

  19. X² + 6x + 9 = 36        1. Factor out the •                                       X² + 6x + 9 • ( x+ 3) ² = √36            2. Square out •                                       36 • X + 3 = ± 6                  3. Simplify • X= 3 ± 6                      4. Isolate the x. • The solutions are x = 9 and x = -3 Completing the square

  20. The three types on how to write a quadratic equation. • Vertex Form • Intercept Form • Standard Form

  21. Use vertex form when the vertex is given. • y= a(x-h)²+k

  22. Use the intercept form when x-intercepts are given. • y= a(x-p)(x-q)

  23. Use the standard form when 3 coordinates are given. • (-2,-1) (1,2) (3, -6)

More Related