212k views
1 vote
For the given equation, list the intercepts and test for symmetry. y=(-5x)/(x^(2)+81)

1 Answer

3 votes

Final answer:

The given equation y = (-5x)/(x^2+81) has a y-intercept at y = 0 and does not have any real x-intercepts. It is not symmetric about the y-axis or the x-axis but is symmetric about the origin.

Step-by-step explanation:

To list the intercepts and test for symmetry for the given equation y=(-5x)/(x2+81), we start by finding where the graph intersects the axes. For the y-intercept, we set x to 0 and solve for y. In this case, the y-intercept is y = 0, since plugging x = 0 into the equation gives us y = (-5*0)/(02+81) = 0.

To find the x-intercepts, we set y to 0 and solve for x. However, there are no real values of x that can satisfy this equation because the numerator would need to be 0, which is not possible with this equation as -5x can't be 0 unless x is 0, but then the denominator is positive yielding the fraction undefined at x = 0.

To test for symmetry, we check for three types: y-axis symmetry, origin symmetry, and x-axis symmetry. A graph is symmetric about the y-axis if replacing x with -x yields the original equation. For this function, replacing x with -x gives us y = (-5(-x))/((-x)2+81) which simplifies to y = (5x)/(x2+81), and so the graph is not symmetric about the y-axis. A graph is symmetric about the origin if replacing both x and y with -x and -y respectively gives the original equation. In this case, we get -y = (-5(-x))/((-x)2+81), which simplifies back to the original equation, hence the graph of the equation is symmetric about the origin. Lastly, a graph is symmetric about the x-axis if replacing y with -y results in the original equation. As seen, this equation does not satisfy that condition. Therefore the equation is only symmetric about the origin.

User Derek Illchuk
by
8.9k points

No related questions found