How do you find the axis of symmetry, graph and find the maximum or minimum value of the function y = x^2 - 2x - 10?

2 Answers
Jul 8, 2017

Complete the square

Explanation:

In this case, completing the square would give you:

y=(x-1)^2-11

Once in this form y=(x-p)^2+q, the negative of p is the x coordinate of the vertex of the graph and q is the y coordinate. This means the minimum (as the coefficient of x^2 is positive (1)) of the graph will be at ( 1 , -11 ) and the line of symmetry will pass through the x coordinate, namely x = 1

Jul 8, 2017

Axis of symmetry: x=1; minimum value -11

Explanation:

graph{x^2-2x-10 [-28.52, 29.22, -14.43, 14.45]}

A quadratic equation in standard form is y=ax^2+bx+c. In this case, a=1, b=-2, and c=-10.
To find the axis of symmetry, use the formula x=-b/(2a).

x=-b/(2a)
x=-(-2)/(2(1))
x=1

The graph above shows that the parabola is an upward-facing one, so it has a minimum value. The max or min is always on the axis of symmetry, so you can substitute x=1 into the function.

y=x^2-2x-10
y=1^2-2(1)-10
y=-11

So, the axis of symmetry is x=1 and the minimum value is -11. You can also write the minimum as the coordinate (1,-11).