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4 votes
Determine any asymptotes (Horizontal, vertical or oblique). Find holes, intercepts and state it's domain.


g(x) = (x^(2) -4)/(x^(3) +x^(2) -4x - 4)

1 Answer

5 votes

Factorize the denominator:


(x^2-4)/(x^3+x^2-4x-4)=(x^2-4)/(x^2(x+1)-4(x+1))=(x^2-4)/((x^2-4)(x+1))

If
x\\eq\pm2, we can cancel the factors of
x^2-4, which makes
x=-2 and
x=2 removable discontinuities that appear as holes in the plot of
g(x).

We're then left with


\frac1{x+1}

which is undefined when
x=-1, so this is the site of a vertical asymptote.

As
x gets arbitrarily large in magnitude, we find


\displaystyle\lim_(x\to-\infty)g(x)=\lim_(x\to+\infty)g(x)=0

since the degree of the denominator (3) is greater than the degree of the numerator (2). So
y=0 is a horizontal asymptote.

Intercepts occur where
g(x)=0 (
x-intercepts) and the value of
g(x) when
x=0 (
y-intercept). There are no
x-intercepts
because
\frac1{x+1} is never 0. On the other hand,


g(0)=(0-4)/(0+0-0-4)=1

so there is one
y-intercept at (0, 1)
.

The domain of
g(x) is the set of values that
x can take on for which
g(x) exists. We've already shown that
x can't be -2, 2, or -1, so the domain is the set


\{x\in\mathbb R\mid x\\eq-2,x\\eq-1,x\\eq2\}

User Andrei L
by
5.0k points
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