How do you graph the inequality 5/(x+3) ≥ 3/x?

1 Answer

The final graph will be the shape of 5/(x+3) with -3 <=x <=0; x>=4.5

Explanation:

In order to graph the whole relationship, we need to graph both the left and right individually.

Here's the left side (5/(x+3)):

graph{5/(x+3) [-20, 20, -20, 20]}

And the right (3/x):

graph{3/x [-20, 20, -20, 20]}

So now the question is, for what values of x is 5/(x+3)>=3/x. We'll find that wherever the result of 5/(x+3), in essence the y value, is larger than that of 3/x:

graph{(y-(5/(x+3)))(y-3/x)=0 [-20, 20, -20, 20]}

By observation, we can see that, approaching the graph from the left to the right, that the first value of x where this holds is at x=-3 and continues until x=0.

At x=4.5, it holds again and does so until +oo:

graph{(y-(5/(x+3)))(y-3/x)=0 [4, 6, 0, 1]}

And so the final graph will be the shape of 5/(x+3) with -3 <=x <=0; x>=4.5