How do you identify the conic section represented by (y-4)^2= 8(x-1) and what are the critical points?

1 Answer
Apr 25, 2018

It is a horizontal parabola and does not have any critical point.

Explanation:

A conic section of the form (y-k)^2=a(x-h) represents a horizontal parabola, whose vertex is (h,k) and axis of symmetry is y-k=0 or y=k

Hence for (y-4)^2=8(x-1), vertex is (1,4) and axis of symmetry is y=4.

Critical points are those points at which (dy)/(dx)=0

As (y-4)^2=8(x-1), implicit differentiation gives

2(y-4)(dy)/(dx)=8 or (dy)/(dx)=4/(y-4)=4/sqrt(8(x-1))

As such, (dy)/(dx) is never 0 and we do not have a critical point.

For a vertical parabola, it is (x-h)^2=a(y-k), whose vertex is (h,k) and axis of symmetry is x=h. in this case we will have a critical point at (h,k).

graph{(y-4)^2=8(x-1) [-8.09, 11.91, -1.28, 8.72]}