What is the domain and range of f(x) = sqrt((x^2) - 3)?

1 Answer

Domain: x<-sqrt3, x>sqrt3

Range: f(x)>=0

Explanation:

I'm going to assume for this question that we are staying within the realm of Real Numbers (and so things like pi and sqrt2 are allowed but sqrt(-1) is not).

The Domain of an equation is the list of all allowable x values.

Let's look at our equation:

f(x)=sqrt(x^2-3)

Ok - we know that square roots can't have negative numbers in them, so what will make our square root term negative?

x^2-3<0

x^2<3

x < abssqrt3 => -sqrt3< x< sqrt3

Ok - so we know that we can't have -sqrt3< x< sqrt3. All other x terms are ok. We can list the domain in a few different ways. I'll use:

x<-sqrt3, x>sqrt3

The Range is the list of resulting values coming from the domain.

We already know that the smallest number the range will be is 0. As x gets larger and larger (both in a positive and negative sense), the range will increase. And so we can write:

f(x)>=0

We can see this in the graph:

graph{sqrt(x^2-3) [-10,10,-2,7]}