No because (-7, 3) is like (x, y)
Plug and chug [what I call it] into the equation
(3) - 4(-7) < 5
3- (-28)<5
31<5 <—— this is not true so it would be galse
Answer:
130.8
Step-by-step explanation:
i just think that you times 0.40 and 327 and then press = and it should give you 130.8
i hope it works
Answer:
x^4 -2x^2 -24
Step-by-step explanation:
(x^2+4)(x^2−6)
FOIL
First: x^2*x^2 = x^4
Outer: x^2 *-6 = -6x^2
Inner: x^2 *4 = 4x^2
Last: 4*-6 = -24
Add them together
x^4 -6x^2 +4x^2 -24
Combine like terms
x^4 -2x^2 -24
This is in standard form since the powers decrease
Answer:
- vertical scaling by a factor of 1/3 (compression)
- reflection over the y-axis
- horizontal scaling by a factor of 3 (expansion)
- translation left 1 unit
- translation up 3 units
Step-by-step explanation:
These are the transformations of interest:
g(x) = k·f(x) . . . . . vertical scaling (expansion) by a factor of k
g(x) = f(x) +k . . . . vertical translation by k units (upward)
g(x) = f(x/k) . . . . . horizontal expansion by a factor of k. When k < 0, the function is also reflected over the y-axis
g(x) = f(x-k) . . . . . horizontal translation to the right by k units
__
Here, we have ...
g(x) = 1/3f(-1/3(x+1)) +3
The vertical and horizontal transformations can be applied in either order, since neither affects the other. If we work left-to-right through the expression for g(x), we can see these transformations have been applied:
- vertical scaling by a factor of 1/3 (compression) . . . 1/3f(x)
- reflection over the y-axis . . . 1/3f(-x)
- horizontal scaling by a factor of 3 (expansion) . . . 1/3f(-1/3x)
- translation left 1 unit . . . 1/3f(-1/3(x+1))
- translation up 3 units . . . 1/3f(-1/3(x+1)) +3
_____
<em>Additional comment</em>
The "working" is a matter of matching the form of g(x) to the forms of the different transformations. It is a pattern-matching problem.
The horizontal transformations could also be described as ...
- translation right 1/3 unit . . . f(x -1/3)
- reflection over y and expansion by a factor of 3 . . . f(-1/3x -1/3)
The initial translation in this scenario would be reflected to a translation left 1/3 unit, then the horizontal expansion would turn that into a translation left 1 unit, as described above. Order matters.