How do you find the vertical, horizontal or slant asymptotes for #f(x) = ( 3x^5 + 1) /( 2x^6 + 3x -1)#?
1 Answer
Dec 8, 2016
Horizontal:
Vertical:
Explanation:
Let
The number of changes in the sigs of the coefficients in #D(x)= and
D(-x) are both 1 only. So, the number of real zeros of D(x) is either 2
or 0. Easily D(0)D(1) and D(-2)D(-1) are both negative. So, two real
roots x = a and x = b are bracketed in (-2, -1) and (0, 1). And so, the
vertical asymptotes are x = a and x = b.
So, y = 0 is the horizontal asymptote.
The x-intercept (y = 0 ) is -(-1/3)^(1/5)=-0.80, nearly.
y-intercept ( x = 0 ) is -1.
graph{y(2x^6+3x-1)-3x^5-1=0.2 [-10, 10, -5, 5]}