Answer:
See Explanation
Explanation:
In a rational equation, horizontal asymptotes are based on the highest degree of the polynomials on the numerator and denominator.
If it is top-heavy (higher degree on the numerator), then there is no asymptote.
Ex:
. The degree of the numerator is 6 and the denominator degree is 3; 6>3, so no asymptote.
If it is bottom-heavy (higher degree on denominator), then the x-axis (y=0) is the horizontal asymptote.
Ex:
. The highest degree of the numerator is 2 vs the highest degree of 5 on the denominator. Thus, the equation is bottom-heavy and the asymptote is at 0.
If the degrees are the same, you take the coefficient of the variables with the highest degrees and then divide.
Ex.
. Take the coefficients of the x^2 (which is the highest degree variable). You should get 6 and 2. And then divide them in order to get:
y=6/2 = 3