How is the graph of #g(x)=-5-4/3x^2# related to the graph of #f(x)=x^2#?

2 Answers
Feb 19, 2018

See explanation

Explanation:

Set #y_1=g(x)=-4/3x^2+0x-5#

Set #y_2=f(x)=x^2+0x+0#

For #f(x)#
If the #x^2# term is positive then the graph is of general shape #uuu#

For #g(x)#
If the #x^2# term is negative then the graph is of general shape #nnn#

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The #4/3# bit from #-4/3x# makes the graph 'narrower' as #4/3>1#
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The graph passes through the y-axis at #y=c# that is:
#(x,y)=(0,-5)#
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
For the vertex of the graph we do this (part of completing the square):

Write as #color(green)(y_1=-4/3(x^2color(red)(-(3/4)0)x)-5)#

The #x_("vertex")=(-1/2)xx[color(red)(-(3/4)0)] #

#x_("vertex")=-1/2xx0 =0#

As in both #f(x) and g(x)# we have #0x# so the axis of symmetry is the y-axis (#x_("vertex")=0#)

#f(x)# axis of symmetry is the y-axis. The constant is 0 so the vertex is at #(x,y)->(0,0)#

#g(x)# axis of symmetry is the y-axis. The constant is -5 so the vertex is at #(x,y)->(0,-5)#

Feb 19, 2018

#f(x)=x^2# is the parent function of #g(x)=-5-4/3x^2#

Explanation:

First, convert to vertex form:

#g(x)=-4/3x^2-5#

It is already in vertex form, or you could put it as

#g(x)=-4/3(x-0)^2-5#

Now, we can tell the parent function of this equation is #f(x)=x^2#

The specific transformations are:

#"Reflect over x-axis"#
#"Vertical Stretch by 4/3"#
#"Down 5"#