164k views
0 votes
Which table represents a quadratic relationship?

A .x -2 -1 0 1 2 3
f(x) 4 2 1 0.5 0.25 0.125


B. x -7 -6 -5 -4 -3 -2
f(x) 135 128 105 72 35 0


C. x -2 -1 0 1 2 3
f(x) -23.4 -23.2 -23 -22.8 -22.6 -22.4


D. x -1 0 1 2 3 4
f(x) 90 56 26 0 -22 -40

2 Answers

4 votes

Answer: D. x -1 0 1 2 3 4

f(x) 90 56 26 0 -22 -40

Explanation:

User Alexandre Landim
by
6.9k points
5 votes

In each case, the x-values are equally-spaced. Thus looking at second differences will tell you if the relation is quadratic. If the second differences are non-zero and constant, then the values have a quadratic relationship.

A. First differences are 2-4 = -2, 1-2 = -1, 0.5-1 = -0.5. Second differences are -1-(-2) = 1, -0.5-(-1) = 0.5. Since 1 ≠ 0.5, this relation is not quadratic. (It is exponential with a base of 1/2.)

B. First differences are 128-135 = -7, 105-128 = -23, 72-105 = -33. Second differences are -23-(-7) = -16, -33-(-23)=-10. Since -16 ≠ -10, this relation is not quadratic. (It is cubic, since 3rd differences are constant at +4.)

C. First differences are -23.2-(-23.4) = 0.2, -23.0-(-23.2) = 0.2, -22.8-(-23.0) = 0.2. Second differences are zero, so this is not a quadratic relation. (It is linear, with a slope of 0.2.)

D. First differences are 56-90 = -34, 26-56 = -30, 0-26 = -26. Second differences are -30-(-34) = 4, -26-(-30) = 4. These are constant (=4), so the relation is quadratic.

The appropriate choice is ...

... D. x -1 0 1 2 3 4

... f(x) 90 56 26 0 -22 -40

User DaGaMs
by
6.2k points