How do you find the vertical, horizontal or slant asymptotes for f(x) = ( x^2-2x)/(x^2-5x+4)?

2 Answers
Mar 2, 2016

vertical asymptotes at x = 1 , x = 4
horizontal asymptote at y = 1

Explanation:

Vertical asymptotes occur as the denominator of a rational function tends to zero. To find the equation let the denominator equal zero.

solve x^2-5x+4 = 0 → (x-1)(x-4) = 0 → x= 1 , x=4

Horizontal asymptotes occur as lim_(x→±∞) f(x) → 0

If the degree of the numerator and denominator are equal , as in this case , both degree 2, then the equation can be found by taking the ratio of leading coefficients.

rArr y = 1/1 = 1 rArr y = 1 " is the equation "

here is the graph of the function.
graph{(x^2-2x)/(x^2-5x+4) [-10, 10, -5, 5]}

There are two vertical asymptotes : x=1 and x=4
Horizontal asymptote : y=1
Slant asymptote : None

Explanation:

f(x)=(x^2-2x)/(x^2-5x+4)

For the Vertical Asymptote:
the factors of the denominator are
(x-4)(x-1) so that the vertical asymptotes are
x=1 and x=4

For the Horizontal Asymptote:

take the limiting value of the function as x approaches infinity

lim_(xrarroo) (x^2-2x)/(x^2-5x+4)=lim_(xrarroo) (1-2/x)/(1-5/x+4/x^2)=1

therefore y=1 is a horizontal asymptote

See the graph of f(x)=(x^2-2x)/(x^2-5x+4)

graph{y=(x^2-2x)/(x^2-5x+4)[-20,20,-10,10]}

See the graph of x=1 and x=4 and y=1

graph{(y-10000x+10000)(y-10000x+410000)(y-0x-1)=0[-20,20,-10,10]}

God bless...I hope the explanation is useful