From simple questions to complex issues, IDNLearn.com has the answers you need. Our community provides timely and precise responses to help you understand and solve any issue you face.

Please show full solutions! WIll Mark Brainliest for the best answer.

SERIOUS ANSWERS ONLY


Please Show Full Solutions WIll Mark Brainliest For The Best Answer SERIOUS ANSWERS ONLY class=

Sagot :

Answer:

  • vertical scaling by a factor of 1/3 (compression)
  • reflection over the y-axis
  • horizontal scaling by a factor of 3 (expansion)
  • translation left 1 unit
  • translation up 3 units

Step-by-step explanation:

These are the transformations of interest:

  g(x) = k·f(x) . . . . . vertical scaling (expansion) by a factor of k

  g(x) = f(x) +k . . . . vertical translation by k units (upward)

  g(x) = f(x/k) . . . . . horizontal expansion by a factor of k. When k < 0, the function is also reflected over the y-axis

  g(x) = f(x-k) . . . . . horizontal translation to the right by k units

__

Here, we have ...

  g(x) = 1/3f(-1/3(x+1)) +3

The vertical and horizontal transformations can be applied in either order, since neither affects the other. If we work left-to-right through the expression for g(x), we can see these transformations have been applied:

  • vertical scaling by a factor of 1/3 (compression) . . . 1/3f(x)
  • reflection over the y-axis . . . 1/3f(-x)
  • horizontal scaling by a factor of 3 (expansion) . . . 1/3f(-1/3x)
  • translation left 1 unit . . . 1/3f(-1/3(x+1))
  • translation up 3 units . . . 1/3f(-1/3(x+1)) +3

_____

Additional comment

The "working" is a matter of matching the form of g(x) to the forms of the different transformations. It is a pattern-matching problem.

The horizontal transformations could also be described as ...

  • translation right 1/3 unit . . . f(x -1/3)
  • reflection over y and expansion by a factor of 3 . . . f(-1/3x -1/3)

The initial translation in this scenario would be reflected to a translation left 1/3 unit, then the horizontal expansion would turn that into a translation left 1 unit, as described above. Order matters.

View image Sqdancefan