Ch 4More Nonlinear Functions and Equations

4.1 More Nonlinear functions and Their Graphs

Constant –

Linear –

Non-Linear –

Monthly average high temps in Daytona Beach

1 / 2 / 3 / 4 / 5 / 6 / 7 / 8 / 9 / 10 / 11 / 12
69 / 70 / 75 / 80 / 85 / 88 / 90 / 89 / 87 / 81 / 76 / 70

Polynomial Functions

A polynomial function f of degree n in variable x can be represented by

where each coefficient is a real number, , and n is a non-negative integer. The leading coefficient is and the degree is n.

Degree Leading

Coefficient

Identifying Extrema

Let c be in the domain of f.

is an absolute maximum if for all x in the domain of f.

is an absolute minimum if for all x in the domain of f.

is an local maximum if for all x near c.

is an local minimum if for all x near c.


Ocean Temperatures at Bermuda

Domain of f

by

min/max

Symmetry

Symmetric wrt y axis

and are both on the graph of f


A function is an even function if for every x in the domain. The graph of an even function is symmetric with respect to the y axis.

A function is an odd function if for every x in the domain. The graph of an odd function is symmetric with respect to the origin.

Even functions contain only even powers.

Odd functions contain only odd powers.

If 0 is in the domain of an odd function, what point must lie on its graph?

-3 / -2 / -1 / 0 / 1 / 2 / 3
10.5 / 2 / / / / 2 / 10.5

4.2 Polynomial Functions and Models

Unemployment rates in Brazil

Year / 2010 / 2012 / 2014 / 2016 / 2018 / 2020
% / 6.75 / 5.48 / 4.84 / 9.19 / 10.4 / 10.0

Polynomial Functions, Equations, Expressions

A turning point occurs whenever the graph of a polynomial function changes from increasing to decreasing or from decreasing to increasing.

Local maximum or minimum

A local extrema is a y-value, not a point, and often corresponds to the y-value of the turning point.

End Behavior of Polynomial Functions

Let f be a polynomial function of degree n with leading coefficient a.

Constant Fcnsdegree zero

No x intercept or turning point

Linear Functionsdegree 1

one x intercept, no turning point

Quadratic Fcns deg 2

Up to 2 x-intercepts, one turning point

Cubic Fcns

Degree 3; 1,2,3 x-int, 0 or 2 turning pts

drops left, rises right

rises left, drops right

Quartic Fcns

Degree 4; 0,1,2,3,4 x-int, up to 3 turning pts

Quintic Fcns

Degree 5; 1,2,3,4,5 x-int, up to 4 turning pts

The graph of a polynomial of degree has at most nx-intercepts, and turning points.

1)If is even

  1. implies the graph of f rises both to the left and right.
  2. implies the graph of f falls both to the left and right.

2)If is odd

  1. implies the graph of f falls to the left and rises to the right.
  2. implies the graph of f rises to the left and falls to the right.

Degree, x intercepts, and turning points

turning points

x-intercepts

leading coefficient

minimum possible degree?

x-intercepts

turning points

local extrema

degree?Leading coefficient?

End behaviors?
Piecewise-Defined Polynomial Functions

Graphing a piecewise-defined function

Graph

f continuous?

Solve
Diminishing returns and overfishing

Number of fish caught (x00, F000 tons)

, absolute max
Polynomial Regressionopt

1960 / 1970 / 1980 / 1990 / 2000
12.4 / 21.8 / 20.4 / 19.3 / 24.0

Turning points?Degree?

Falls left, rises right?Leading coeff?

enter points from table

cubic regression

graph

4.3 Division of Polynomials

Long division


Division Algorithm for polynomials

For any polynomial with degree and any number k, there exists a unique polynomial , and a number r such that

The degree of is one less than the degree of and r is called the remainder.

Synthetic Division and long division

Remainder Theorem

If the divisor is , then the division algorithm for polynomials simplifies to .

If a polynomial is divided by , the remainder is .

4.4Real Zeros of Polynomial Functions

Bird Population

Factor Theorem

A polynomial has a factor if and only if .

Zeros with multiplicity

Complete Factored Theorem

Suppose a polynomial

has real zeros , where distinct zeros are listed as many times as their multiplicities. Then can be written in complete factored form as

zeros: and 2

zeros:, 1, and 3

Factoring a polynomial graphically

has a zero of .

Finding the multiplicity of a zero graphically

Depth a ball sinks in water

wood , zeros @ , 7.13, 12

aluminum , zeros @

Water balloon , zeros @ , 10, 10

Polynomial Equations

Solve symbolically

graphically, numerically

Intermediate Value Theoremopt

Let and with and be two points on the graph of a continuous function f. Then, on , f assumes every value between and at least once.

4.5 Fundamental Theorem of Algebra

A polynomial of degree has at least one complex zero.

A polynomial of degree n has at most n distinct zeros.

Represent a polynomial of degree 4 with leading coefficient 2 and zeros of –3, 5, i, and –i in complete factored form and fully expanded form.

Determine the complete factored form of

Conjugate Zeros Theorem

If a polynomial has only real coefficients, and if is a zero of , then is also a zero of .

Find a cubic polynomial with leading coefficient of 2 and zeros of 3 and .

Polynomial Equations with Complex Solutions

Solutions are

Find the zeros of , given that one zero is .

4.6Rational Functions and Models

A function , where and are polynomials and , is a rational function.

Rational? Domain?

Vertical Asymptotes

The line is a vertical asymptote of if or as x approaches k from the left or the right.

Horizontal Asymptotes

The line is a horizontal asymptote of the graph of if as x approaches either or .


0 / 0.001 / 0.01 / 0.1 / 1 / 10 / 100 / 1000
1000 / 100 / 10 / 1 / 0.1 / 0.01 / 0.001
-1000 / -100 / -10 / -1 / -0.1 / -0.01 / -0.001 / 0
-0.001 / -0.01 / -0.1 / -1 / -10 / -100 / -1000


Finding vertical and horizontal asymptotes

Let be a rational function in lowest terms.

To find a vertical asymptote, solve for x. If is a zero of , then is a vertical asymptote. (if k is a zero of both and , then is not in lowest terms. Factor out from both.

Horizontal asymptote

1)If the degree of is less than the degree of , is a horizontal asymptote.

2)If the degree of is equal to the degree of , then is a horizontal asymptote, where a and b are the leading coefficients of and .

3)If the degree of is greater than the degree of , there are no horizontal asymptotes.

Slant or Oblique Asymptotes

Graphing with transformations

Graphing a rational function

  1. Find all vertical asymptotes.
  2. Find horizontal and slant asymptotes.
  3. Find y-intercept .
  4. Find x-intercepts .
  5. Will graph intersect non-horizontal asymptote? or ?
  6. Plot selected points. Choose x in each part of domain.
  7. Connect the dots.

4.7 More Equations and Inequalities

Rational Equations

Designing a box

Volume is 324 cu in, surf area is 342 sq in.

Length is 4x the height

Variation

Let x and y denote two quantities and n be a positive number. Then y is directly proportional to the nth power of x, or y varies directly as the nth power of x, if there is a non-zero k such that.

k is called the constant of proportionality.

The time t required for a pendulum to swing back and forth once is its period. The length l of a pendulum is directly proportional to the square of t. A two-foot pendulum has a 1.57 second period.

Find the constant of proportionality k.

Predict t for .

Let x and y denote two quantities and n be a positive number. Then y is inversely proportional to the nth power of x, or y varies inversely as the nth power of x, if there is a non-zero k such that . If , then y is inversely proportional to x or y varies inversely as x.

Intensity of light

At a distance of 3 meters, a 100 watt bulb produces an intensity of 0.88 watt per square meter.

Find the constant of proportionality k.

Determine the intensity at a distance of 2 meters.

Polynomial and Rational Inequalities

1)If necessary, rewrite equation as, where > can be any inequality symbol.

2)Solve for the boundary numbers.

3)Use boundary numbers to separate the number line into disjoint intervals. On each interval, will be always positive, or always be negative.

4)Evaluate at a test value in each interval to determine if it is part of the solution. Alternatively, graph, and observe the graph.

Modeling customers in a line

Solving rational inequalities

1)If necessary, rewrite equation as , where > can be any inequality symbol.

2)Solve and for boundary values.

3)Use boundary values to separate the number line into disjoint intervals. will be always positive, or always negative on each interval.

4)Evaluate at a test value in each interval to determine if it is part of the solution.

4.8Power Functions and Radical Equations


Evaluate radical functions

, x = 27

, x = 4

, x = 8

The number N of different plant species that live on a Galapagos island can be related to the island’s area A by the function:

Approximate N for A = 100, 200

Does N double when A doubles?

Power Functions

A function , b constant, is a power function. If for some integer , then f is a root function given by , or equivalently, .

Domain

- q odd

q even

- b irrational

Graphing power functions

Wing size

Heavier birds have larger wings. For some species, the surface area to weight can be modeled by

Suppose surface area is square meter

Planetary OrbitsJohannes Kepler (1571-1630)

Mercury / Venus / Earth / Mars / Jupiter / Saturn
0.387 / 0.723 / 1.00 / 1.52 / 5.2 / 9.54
0.241 / 0.615 / 1.00 / 1.88 / 11.9 / 29.5

Scatterplot on p 322

closest for

Power function?

? ?

Domain? Range?

Interval where f(x) increasing?

?

Even/Odd function?

Power regressionopt

w

/ 0.5 / 1.5 / 2.0 / 2.5 / 3.0
l / 0.77 / 1.10 / 1.22 / 1.31 / 1.40