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What are the zeros of the function shown in the graph?

What are the zeros of the function shown in the graph?-example-1
What are the zeros of the function shown in the graph?-example-1
What are the zeros of the function shown in the graph?-example-2

2 Answers

3 votes

Answer:

the zeros are -3,-1, and 1

Explanation:

zeros are nothing more that where the function crosses or touches the x-axis

User Silvaren
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4 votes

Answer: Third Option

-3, -1, 1

Explanation:

By definition, the zeros of a function f(x) are all the values x for which f(x) = 0.

In other words, the zeros of a function f(x) are the intersections of the graph of f(x) with the axis of x.

Therefore, to identify the zeros of the function shown, identify the values of x in which the graph intersects the horizontal axis.

You can see in the graph that these intersections occur in


x = -3\\x = -1\\x = 1

Finally the zeros are: -3, -1, 1

User Gashi
by
7.8k points

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