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Which equation represents the transformation formed by horizontally stretching the graph of f(x) = √x by a factor of 4 and then vertically shifting the graph 2 units down?

Responses

A.
g(x)=\sqrt{(1)/(4) x
-2

B.
g(x) =4√(x)
-2

C.
g(x)=√(4x)
-2

D.
g(x)=√(4x-2)

Which equation represents the transformation formed by horizontally stretching the-example-1
User Geier
by
2.8k points

1 Answer

14 votes
14 votes

Answer:


\textsf{A.} \quad g(x)=√(4x)-2

Explanation:

Transformations

For a > 0


f(x)+a \implies f(x) \: \textsf{translated $a$ units up}


f(x)-a \implies f(x) \: \textsf{translated $a$ units down}


a\:f(x) \implies f(x) \: \textsf{stretched parallel to the $y$-axis (vertically) by a factor of $a$}


f(ax) \implies f(x) \: \textsf{stretched parallel to the $x$-axis (horizontally) by a factor of $(1)/(a)$}

Given parent function:


f(x) = √(x)

1. Horizontal stretch by a factor of 4:

f(4x) is a horizontal stretch by a factor of 1/4.

So f(1/4x) is a horizontal stretch by a factor of 4.


f\left((1)/(4)x\right)\implies g(x)=\sqrt{(1)/(4)x}

2. Vertical shift by 2 units down:


f\left((1)/(4)x\right)-2\implies g(x)=\sqrt{(1)/(4)x}-2

User Jscott
by
3.1k points