How do you find vertical, horizontal and oblique asymptotes for #y = (2x^2+x+2)/(x+1)#?
2 Answers
Vertical:
Explanation:
Cross multiplying,
The form is (ax+by+c)(lx+my+n)=non-zero constant.
So, the given equation represents a hyperbola, with asymptotes
graph{y(x+1)-2x^2-x-2=0 [-40, 40, -20, 20]}
vertical asymptote at x = - 1
slant asymptote is y = 2x - 1
Explanation:
The denominator of y cannot be zero as this would make y undefined. Equating the denominator to zero and solving gives the value that x cannot be and if the numerator is non-zero for this value the it is a vertical asymptote.
solve :
#x+1=0rArrx=-1" is the asymptote"# Horizontal asymptotes occur as
#lim_(xto+-oo),ytoc" ( a constant)"# divide all terms on numerator/denominator by the highest power of x, that is
#x^2#
#y=((2x^2)/x^2+x/x^2+2/x^2)/(x/x^2+1/x^2)=(2+1/x+2/x^2)/(1/x+1/x^2# as
#xto+-oo,yto(2+0+0)/(0+0)=2/0# This is undefined hence there are no horizontal asymptotes.
Oblique asymptotes occur when the degree of the numerator > degree of the denominator. This is the case here (numerator-degree 2 , denominator- degree 1 ) Hence there is an oblique asymptote.
Using
#color(blue)"polynomial division"#
#y=2x-1+3/(x+1)# as
#xto+-oo,yto2x-1+0#
#rArry=2x-1" is the asymptote"#
graph{(2x^2+x+2)/(x+1) [-46.24, 46.24, -23.12, 23.12]}