How do you find the Vertical, Horizontal, and Oblique Asymptote given R(x) = (3x) / (x^2 - 9)R(x)=3xx29?

1 Answer
Nov 17, 2016

Vertical asymptotes: x=-3x=3, x=3x=3
Horizontal asymptote: y=0y=0
Oblique asymptote: none.

Explanation:

1) To find the vertical asymptotes factor the denominator and see what values of xx make a factored expression equal to zero, these values are the vertical asymptotes.

x^2-9=(x+3)(x-3)x29=(x+3)(x3)
The first vertical asymptote: x+3=0-> x+3=0"x=-3x=3"
The second vertical asymptote: x-3=0->x3=0"x=3x=3"

2) To find the horizontal asymptote divide the highest degree term in the numerator by the highest degree term in the denominator and see what would happen to R(x)R(x) as xx goes to high values.

(3x)/x^2=3/x3xx2=3x, if xx goes to high values the number will reach zero, so the horizontal asymptote is zero.

3) There is no oblique asymptotes since 3x3x is not divisible by x^2-9x29. There will be an oblique asymptote if the numerator is one degree higher than the denominator and the asymptote will be the quotient of the algebraic long division.