How do you graph y=1x2x6?

1 Answer
Aug 4, 2015

You find the intercepts and the asymptotes, and then you sketch the graph.

Explanation:

**Step 1. ** Find the y-intercepts.

Set x=0 and solve for y.

f(0)=16

The y-intercept is at (0,16).

Step 2. Find the x-intercepts.

Set y=0 and solve for x.

0=1x2x6

0=1

This is an impossibility, so there is no x-intercept.

Step 3. Find the vertical asymptotes.

Set the denominator equal to zero and solve for x.

x2x6=0

(x3)(x+2)=0

x=3 and x=2

There are vertical asymptotes at x=2 and x=3.

Step 4. Find the horizontal asymptote.

The degree of the denominator is less than the degree of the numerator, so

The horizontal asymptote is at y=0 (the x-axis).

Step 5. Draw your axes and the asymptotes.

Graph 1

Step 6. Sketch the graph in each region defined by the asymptotes.

(a) The left hand region has the x-axis and x=2 as asymptotes.

f(3)=16.

The point at (3,16) is in the second quadrant, so we have a "hyperbola" above the horizontal asymptote.

Graph 2

(b) The right hand region has x=3 and the x-axis as asymptotes.

f(4)=16.

The point at (4,16) is in the first quadrant, so we have a "hyperbola" above the horizontal asymptote.

So we have a mirror-image hyperbola in the first quadrant.

Graph 3

(c) In the middle region, we have

f(0)=16 and

f(1)=16

f(0.5)=16.25

The points at (0,16), (0.5,16.25), and (1,16) are all below the x-axis, so we have an "inverted parabola" between the vertical asymptotes.

Graph 4