204k views
4 votes
(35 POINTS!!) Given f of x is equal to 1 over the quantity x minus 3 and g of x is equal to the square root of the quantity x plus 3, what is the domain of f (g(x))?

[–3, ∞)
[–3, 6) ∪ (6, ∞)
(–∞, 3) ∪ (3, ∞)


User Aerows
by
8.2k points

1 Answer

3 votes

Answer:

the second option

[–3, 6) ∪ (6, ∞)

Explanation:

f(x) = 1/(x - 3)

the domain is every value of x that does not turn the denominator to 0. so, x <> 3.

g(x) = sqrt(x + 3)

the domain is every value of x that does not turn (x+3) into a negative value. so, x >= -3.

f(g(x)) = 1/(sqrt(x + 3) - 3)

the domain is all values of x that are valid for g(x) AND that do not generate range values of g(x) that violate the domain of f(x).

so, it is (x >= -3) AND (sqrt(x + 3) <> 3).

and sqrt(x + 3) = 3, if (x + 3) = 9.

that means x = 6.

so, 6 is forbidden, every other value of x is allowed here.

therefore, the domain of f(g(x)) is

(x >= -3) AND (x <> 6)

and that is equivalent to

[-3, 6) u (6, infinity)

everything larger or equal to -3 and different from 6.

User Samudrala Ramu
by
8.6k points
Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.

9.4m questions

12.2m answers

Categories