My math teacher had explained these graphs (or at least tried to) to me. It got to the point where he was explaining it for like the 10th time and I still didn't get it. So I did what a normal kid would do and just nodded and told him I got it even though I had no idea what's happening. So I'm turning to the internet to help me with this. Can anyone explain the methods to graph these equations? (or just show me pictures of working out, that would help me heaps)
y=x/(x^2-9)
y=(x^2)/(x^2-16)
y=(x^2)/(x-2)
y=(4-x^2)/(4+x^2)
etc.
All I got so far is that limits and asymptotes are things that you need to know to graph these (yeah, that's practically nothing).
MORE INFO: This is my working out for the first question. I also included the parts that I know that I need but don't actually know how to get.
y=x/(x^2-9)
Vertical asymptote:
x^2-9=0
x=3, -3
Horizontal asymptote:
???
Intercepts:
When x=0,
y=0/(0^2-9)= 0
When y=0,
0=x/(x^2-9)= 0
Therefore, eqn passes through the point (0,0)
Limits [knowledge of limits is practically nil]
???
y=x/(x^2-9)
y=(x^2)/(x^2-16)
y=(x^2)/(x-2)
y=(4-x^2)/(4+x^2)
etc.
All I got so far is that limits and asymptotes are things that you need to know to graph these (yeah, that's practically nothing).
MORE INFO: This is my working out for the first question. I also included the parts that I know that I need but don't actually know how to get.
y=x/(x^2-9)
Vertical asymptote:
x^2-9=0
x=3, -3
Horizontal asymptote:
???
Intercepts:
When x=0,
y=0/(0^2-9)= 0
When y=0,
0=x/(x^2-9)= 0
Therefore, eqn passes through the point (0,0)
Limits [knowledge of limits is practically nil]
???
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