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Complete the square to rewrite y-x^2-6x+14 in vertex form. then state whether the vertex is a maximum or minimum and give its cordinates

User Hink
by
6.2k points

1 Answer

4 votes

Answer:


y= x^2 -6x +((6)/(2))^2 +14 -((6)/(2))^2

And solving we have:


y= x^2 -6x +9 + 14 -9


y= (x-3)^2 +5

And we can write the expression like this:


y-5 = (x-3)^2

The vertex for this case would be:


V= (3,5)

And the minimum for the function would be 3 and there is no maximum value for the function

Explanation:

For this case we have the following equation given:


y= x^2 -6x +14

We can complete the square like this:


y= x^2 -6x +((6)/(2))^2 +14 -((6)/(2))^2

And solving we have:


y= x^2 -6x +9 + 14 -9


y= (x-3)^2 +5

And we can write the expression like this:


y-5 = (x-3)^2

The vertex for this case would be:


V= (3,5)

And the minimum for the function would be 3 and there is no maximum value for the function

User Cliff Cummings
by
7.0k points
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