How do you find vertical, horizontal and oblique asymptotes for (x+6)/(x^2-9x+18)?

2 Answers
Dec 14, 2016

The vertical asymptotes are x=3 and x=6
No oblique asymptote.
The horizontal asymptote is y=0

Explanation:

Let's factorise the denominator

x^2-9x+18=(x-6)(x-3)

Let

f(x)=(x+6)/(x^2-9x+18)=(x+6)/((x-6)(x-3))

The domain of f(x) is D_f(x)=RR-{3,6}

As we cannot divide by 0, x!=3 and x!=6

The vertical asymptotes are x=3 and x=6

As the degree of the numerator is < than the degree of the denominator, there is no oblique asymptote.

To calculate the limits as x->+-oo, we take the highest coefficients in the numerator and denominator

lim_(x->-oo)f(x)=lim_(x->-oo)x/x^2=lim_(x->-oo)1/x=0^(-)

lim_(x->+oo)f(x)=lim_(x->+oo)x/x^2=lim_(x->+oo)1/x=0^(+)

The horizontal asymptote is y=0

graph{(y-(x+6)/(x^2-9x+18))(y)=0 [-22.8, 22.8, -11.4, 11.4]}

Dec 14, 2016

Vertical asymototes x=6 and x=3

Horizontal asymptote y=0

Explanation:

f(x) = (x+6)/(x^2-9x+18). Factorise the denominator:

=(x+6)/((x-6)(x-3))

f(x) has no oblique asymptotes. It has two vertical asymptotes given by x-6=0 and x-3=0.

Since the degree of numerator is less than that of denominator, divide both by x , giving f(x)= (1+6/x)/(x-9+18/x) . Now find the limit as x-> oo giving f(x)=y=0, which is a horizontal asymptotes