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Omg please help please

Omg please help please-example-1
User Tenstan
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1 Answer

4 votes


x^(2)Answer:

(Explanation)

Explanation:

Part A:

The graph of y =
x^(2) + 2 will be translated 2 units up from the graph of y =
x^(2).

If you plug in 0 for x, you get a y-value of 2. The 2 is also not included with the
x^(2), which is why it doesn't translate left.

This is what graph A should look like:

[Attached File]

Part B:

The graph of y =
x^(2) - 2 will be translated 2 units down from the graph of y =
x^(2).

If you plug in 0 for x, you get a y-value of -2. The 2 is also not included with the
x^(2), which is why it doesn't translate right.

This is what graph B should look like:

[Attached File]

Part C:

The graph of y = 2
x^(2) is a stretched version of the graph y =
x^(2). Numbers that are greater than 1 stretch and open up and numbers less than -1 stretch and open down.

This is what graph C should look like:

[Attached File]

Part D:

The graph of y =
(1)/(2)x^(2) is a compressed version of the graph y =
x^(2). Numbers that are in-between 0 and 1, and -1 and 0 are compressed.

This is what graph D should look like:

[Attached File]

Omg please help please-example-1
Omg please help please-example-2
Omg please help please-example-3
Omg please help please-example-4
User JSobell
by
7.8k points

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