How do you find the domain and range of y =sqrt (x^2 - 9)?

1 Answer
Jul 30, 2017

The domain is (-oo,-3]uu[3,oo)
The range is [0,oo)

Explanation:

One way to find it is by graphing it, and then looking for the y axis (which shows the range) and the x axis (which shows the domain)

graph{sqrt(x^2-9) [-10, 10, -5, 5]}

It looks like the range is [0,oo) (the graph isn't defined for negative numbers)

The domain is (-oo,-3]uu[3,oo) (For x=-3 to x=3, it is not defined).

But let's solve this algebraically.

The square root function is only defined when the number or expression under the radical sign is greater than or equal to 0.

Therefore, y=sqrt(x^2-9) rarr x^2-9>=0
Now, we set it equal to 0
x^2-9=0
x^2=9
x=-3, x=3

Now we have these points. Let us call them boundary points of the real number line. So we have 3 intervals - (-oo,-3), (-3,3), and (3,oo)
Just choose a point in each interval and substitute it into the original equation (x^2-9>=0)to check if it is valid or not, and each boundary point to see if it is in the domain or not. We find that -3 and 3 is defined, (-oo,-3) and (3,oo) is also defined but (-3,3) is not. So since [ ] means including, we get the domain is (-oo,-3]uu[3,oo). We put ( ) around the infinity symbols because infinity is never reached, so it is not an included value.

For the range, just think about this - the lowest value a square root function can give is 0, because the lowest point where the square root function is defined is when it is 0. sqrt(0) IS defined, whereas sqrt(-0.000001) is not. So it is simply [0,oo) - and including 0.