How do you graph #y=sqrt(x-0.5)#, compare it to the parent graph and what is the domain and range?

1 Answer
May 3, 2017

See explanation

#x in RR and y in RR larr" what is called Real Numbers"#

Domain #->" input "-> x>=0.5 -> [0.5,+oo)#
Range #->" output "->y-> (-oo, +oo)#

Explanation:

Just for identification purposes:

Identify the standardised graph of #y=x# by the name #G_1#

Identify the graph of #y=x-0.5 # by the name #G_2#
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#color(blue)("The affect of subtracting 0.5 from "x)#

Step 1:

Using #G_1# look at the ordered pair point of #(x-0.5,y)#

Step 2:
Now go to #G_2# and plot the y value for #G_1# against the #x# for #G_2#

Effectively it is 'shifting' #y=x# to the right by 0.5
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To plot the root we have to remember that the square root of a value has a #+-# type answer

So we actually have #y=+-sqrt(x-0.5)#

Thus we plot two graphs.#" One for "y=+sqrt(x-0.5)#
#" One for "y=-sqrt(x-0.5)#
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

There is a set of numbers given the name 'Complex Numbers'

To avoid entering that 'realm' of mathematics we do not permit #x-0.5<0#

Tony B