1 / 9

Warmups :

Warmups : . You may use your graphing calculators for the following: Compare/Contrast the graphs of y = x 2 , y = 3x 2 , and y = 5x 2 Compare/Contrast the graphs of y = ⅛x 2 and y = ¼x 2 Compare/Contrast the graphs of y = -x 2 , y = -4x 2 , and y = -⅛x 2.

yehuda
Download Presentation

Warmups :

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. Warmups: • You may use your graphing calculators for the following: • Compare/Contrast the graphs of • y = x2, y = 3x2, and y = 5x2 • Compare/Contrast the graphs of • y = ⅛x2 and y = ¼x2 • Compare/Contrast the graphs of • y = -x2, y = -4x2, and y = -⅛x2 These graphs represent vertical stretch and reflection translations.

  2. Beyond Plotting Points ~ Vertical and Horizontal Stretch (6.1) To make it easier … let’s look at a function that we’re comfortable with … y = x2 x y So … (2, 4) and (-2, 4) are points on the graph y = x2… 2 4 -2 4

  3. Original points on y = x2: (2, 4) and (-2, 4) COMPARE: y = 2x2 and y = (2x)2 Multiply the input by 2. Multiply the output by 2. Vertical Stretch Horizontal Stretch ** look for the same inputs as f(x) ** look for the same outputs as f(x) Y = 2f(2) = 8 2 = 2x 1 = x 1= x ( 2, 8) ( 1, 4) New points: New points: (-2, 8) ( -1, 4) Same inputs as original Same outputs as original

  4. Example: x -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 f(x) 3 2 1 0 1 2 3 a) Find 2f(x) Check w/ graphing calculator: f(x) = |x| Y1 = |x| Y2 = 2|x| Y3 = |2x| Use the table to look at specific values -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 x 2f(x) 6 4 2 0 2 4 6 b) Find f(2x) - 1 -1/2 0 1/2 1 3/2 -3/2 x f(2x) 3 2 1 0 1 2 3

  5. Odd-Even Functions Even ~ A function is said to be evenif f(-x) always yields f(x) A function is said to be oddif f(-x) always yields -f(x) Odd ~

  6. Example: Is f(x) = x2 is an even function, an odd function, or neither? FYI: Any EVEN function is symmetric to the y-axis. On a smaller scale … IN: 2 á OUT: 4 IN: -2 OUTOO á OUT: 4 f(x) = x2 Results in the same output … Therefore, EVEN function. f(-x) = (-x)2 = x2

  7. Example: Is f(x) = x3 is an even function, an odd function, or neither? FYI: Any ODD function is symmetric to the origin On a smaller scale … IN: 2 á OUT: 8 IN: -2 OUTOO á OUT: -8 Meaning each pre-image point is the same distance to the origin as its image point f(x) = x3 Results in negative outputs of each other … Therefore, ODD function. f(-x) = (-x)3 = -x3

  8. Review: What does y = a(x – h)2 + k mean?

  9. GROUPS: • Each group makes a poster of a parent function: • The poster must include: • Equation of the parent function • 5 points in a data table • graph that includes the 5 points • Domain, Range, Zeros, f(0) =____ • Increasing/Decreasing intervals •  For what values of x, does f(x) increase? •  For what values of x, does f(x) decrease? • Even, Odd, Neither? • Posters will be graded on the above as well as neatness!

More Related