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24 votes
24 votes
Consider Functions F and G

Consider Functions F and G-example-1
User AdvSphere
by
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2 Answers

16 votes
16 votes

Answer:

A

Explanation:

User Mehdi Farhadi
by
3.3k points
16 votes
16 votes

Answer:

A

Explanation:

We are given two functions:


\displaystyle f(x)=(x-16)/(x^2+6x-40)\text{ and } g(x)=(1)/(x+10)

And we want to find:


f(x)+g(x)

Thus:


\displaystyle =(x-16)/(x^2+6x-40)+(1)/(x+10)

We can factor the denominator of the first term:


\displaystyle =(x-16)/((x+10)(x-4))+(1)/(x+10)

In order to add the two terms, we must have a common denominator. To achieve this, we can multiply to second term by (x - 4). Therefore:


\displaystyle =(x-16)/((x+10)(x-4))+(1)/(x+10)\Big((x-4)/(x-4)\Big)

Multiply:


\displaystyle =(x-16)/((x+10)(x-4))+(x-4)/((x+10)(x-4))

Combine:


\displaystyle =((x-16)+(x-4))/((x+10)(x-4))

Simplify:


\displaystyle =(2x-20)/((x+10)(x-4))

We can expand the denominator:


\displaystyle =(2x-20)/(x^2+6x-40)

Therefore, our answer is A.

User Cldrr
by
2.7k points
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