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? asked in Science & MathematicsMathematics · 3 years ago

Explain why a graph with equation y=2x^2-8x+9 doesn't intersect the x axis?

3 Answers

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  • ?
    Lv 7
    3 years ago

    That's very provable by just determining the discriminant, b^2 - 4ac.

    (-8)^2 - 4(2)(9) = 64 - 72 = -8.

    You have a negative discriminant, so there aren't any real solutions. That's how you know y will always be positive no matter what x is, and the graph won't ever touch the x-axis, which is the main source for real number solutions.

  • Como
    Lv 7
    3 years ago

    f ` (x) = 4x - 8 = 0 for turning point

    x = 2

    f (2) = 8 - 16 + 9 = 1

    Turning point (2,1)

    f " (x) = 4 > 0

    Thus (2,1) is a Minimum turning point

    Graph will not cut x axis

  • 3 years ago

    One test would be to compute the discriminant. That's the portion of the quadratic formula under the square root symbol.

    d = b² - 4ac

    If that is negative, then you are adding/subtracting the square root of a negative which has no real solutions. That's equivalent to saying the function has no zeros. Because it has no zeros, it never crosses the line y=0 which is the x-axis.

    So let's compute the discriminant:

    d = (-8)² - 4(2)(9)

    d = 64 - 72

    d = -8

    As suspected the discriminant is negative and hence the parabola never crosses the x-axis.

    Another way to solve this would be to figure out the vertex:

    y = 2(x - 2)² + 1

    The vertex is (2, 1).

    Since the leading coefficient (2) is positive, we have an upward facing parabola whose minimum is the vertex point (2,1). That's above the x-axis so it will never intersect the x-axis.

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