How do you find the focus, vertex, and directrix of y^2+4x-4y-8=0?

1 Answer
Jan 26, 2016

The focus is at(1,3), the vertex is (2,3) and the directrix is at x = 3

Explanation:

Reformulate the equation to have one variable on its own on the left hand side. In this case it should be x because y is the one that is raised to a power.

y^2 +4x - 4y -8=0
4x = -y^2+4y+8
x=-1/4(y^2 -4y-8)

This represents a horizontal parabola, because x is being expressed in terms of y. It is opening to the left, because of the minus sign.

We need to get this into vertex form x= a(y-b)^2 +c where (b,c) is the vertex.

x= -1/4((y-2)^2-4 -8)
x = -1/4(y-2)^2 +12/4 = -1/4(y-2)^2 +3

The vertex is (2,3)

Rearranging the equation as -4(x-3) = (y-2)^2 which is in the form 4p(x-h) = (y-k)^2 where p is the distance between the vertex and the focus which equals the distance from the vertex to the directrix.

In this case p=-1 so the focus is at(1,3) one unit to the left of the vertex.

The directrix is therefore at x = 3