1 / 13

Vertical shifts (up)

Vertical shifts (up). A familiar example:. y-values each increase by 3. Vertical shift up 3:. graph is shifted up 3 units. More vertical shifts (down). Original curve:. y-values each decrease by 5. Vertical shift down 5:. graph is shifted down 5 units. Horizontal shifts (right).

Download Presentation

Vertical shifts (up)

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. Vertical shifts (up) A familiar example: y-values each increase by 3 Vertical shift up 3: graph is shifted up 3 units

  2. More vertical shifts (down) Original curve: y-values each decrease by 5 Vertical shift down 5: graph is shifted down 5 units

  3. Horizontal shifts (right) Original curve: Horizontal shift right 3: y-values are shifted to the right 3 units graph is shifted right 3 units

  4. More horizontal shifts (left) Original curve: y-values are shifted to the left 4 units Horizontal shift Left 4: graph is shifted left 4 units

  5. Summary of vertical and horizontal shifts Given a function g whose graph is known, and a positive number k, the graph of the function f is: graph of g, shifted up k units graph of g, shifted down k units CAUTION:the signs here may be counter-intuituve! graph of g, shifted right k units graph of g, shifted left k units

  6. Reflections about the x-axis Original curve: y-values each replaced by their opposite undefined if x < 0 Reflected about x-axis:

  7. Reflections about the y-axis Original curve: mirror image of y-values undefined if x < 0 Reflected about y-axis: undefined if x > 0 domain: domain:

  8. Summary of reflections Given a function g whose graph is known, the graph of the function f is: graph of g, reflected about the x-axis domain of f is domain of g graph of g, reflected about the y-axis domain of f is "opposite" of domain of g i.e. if domain of g is [a,b] then domain of f is [-b,-a]

  9. Vertical stretching A cubic polynomial: each y-value doubles

  10. Vertical Shrinking The same cubic: each y-value shrinks by 1/3

  11. Horizontal Stretching The same cubic: Y-values are stretched out from the center

  12. Horizontal shrinking The same cubic

  13. Summary of stretching and shrinking Given a function g whose graph is known, and a positive number c, the graph of the function f is: graph of g, stretched vertically graph of g, shrunk vertically graph of g, shrunk horizontally graph of g, stretched horizontally

More Related