How do you find the domain and range of #g(x) = x/(x^2 - 16)#?
2 Answers
The domain of
The range is
Explanation:
As you cannot divide by
Therefore,
The domain of
To calculate the range, proceed as follows
Let
This is a quadratic equation in
the discriminant
Therefore,
The range is
graph{x/(x^2-16) [-10, 10, -5, 5]}
Domain:
Range:
Explanation:
Given:
First factor the denominator since
Find the Domain - valid input - usually
For most functions, the domain is
- a radical such as a square root - limits the domain
- a denominator - can produce holes and/or vertical asymptotes
- inverse trigonometry functions
- natural log function
#(y = ln x)#
In your example, the vertical asymptotes are the cause. When the denominator function
Domain:
Find the Range - valid output - usually
For most functions, the range is also
- a radical such as a square root - limits the range
- a quadratic or even powered function can limit the range. The vertex will be a minimum or a maximum
- absolute value functions can have a vertex
- a rational function (has a numerator and denominator) can have a horizontal asymptote
- a natural exponential function (
#y = e^x# )
In your example, w have a rational function. The degree of the numerator function = 1
Range:
But you can see from the graph below that the point
How would you know this without graphing the function? Create a table of values.
graph{x/(x^2-16) [-10, 10, -5, 5]}