How do you find the vertex and the intercepts for #y= -2(x+3)(x-1)#?
1 Answer
Vertex: Find AoS, sub in as
X-intercepts: it's in factored form.
Y-intercept: sub in
Explanation:
So intercepts are when the parabola touches the axes.
It is when one variable 0, thus, we can sub in
X-intercepts
That is the zeros AKA roots AKA solutions. The equation is in factored form, giving us the zeros without having to calculate it. Thus, the x-intercepts are
Y-intercept
We can find the
#y=-2(x+3)(x-1)#
#y=-2(0+3)(0-1)#
#y=-2(3)(-1)#
#y=6#
Therefore, the
Vertex
To find vertex in factored form, the easiest method is to find the axis of symmetry, and sub that in as
The axis of symmetry can be calculated given the formula:
=>
=>
Finding AoS
#x=(r+s)/2#
#x=(-3+)/2#
#x=-2/2#
#x=-1#
Subbing in AoS to find y-component of vertex
#y=-2(x+3)(x-1)#
#y=-2(-1+3)(-1-1)#
#y=-2(2)(-2)#
#y=8#
Therefore, the vertex is
Let's check our work by graphing it.
graph{-2(x+3)(x-1) [-10, 10, -0.24, 9.76]}
As you can see, the vertex and intercepts are correct.
Hope this helps :)