How do you find the vertex and the intercepts for #y=-4x^2+24x#?

1 Answer
Dec 14, 2017

Y-intercept is #y=0#.
X-intercepts at #x=0# and #x=6#
Vertex at #(3, 36)#

Explanation:

Y-intercept.

This is the place the graph cuts the y-axis, which is the line #x=0#.

So #"let " x=0#

#y=-4*0^2-24*0#
#y=0#
#:. "y-intercept at " (0,0)#
The y-intercept is 0.

OK, you don't need to sub in x=0 physically to work this out, but it gets you into the habit. In a quadratic of the from #y=ax^2+bx+c#, the y-intercept is at #c#.

X-intercept

This is where the graph cuts the line #y=0#

So #"let "y=0#
#0=4x^2-24x#
#0=4x(x-6)#
#:. x=0 " or " x=6#
So the x-intercepts are at #x=0# and #x=6#

Vertex

For this, we need to complete the square.

#y=-4x^2+24#
#=-4(x^2-6)#
#=-4([x-3]^2-9)#
#=-4[x-3]^2+36#

So the vertex is at #(3, 36)#

Alternatively, if you know any calculus, you could differentiate this expression and set the derivative to 0. If you don't, don't worry - completing the square works fine, although sometimes fractions can be awkward.

Here is the graph #y=-4x^2+24x#

graph{-4x^2+24x [-52.6, 51.4, -4.9, 47.1]}