Sovi.AI - AI Math Tutor

Scan to solve math questions

QUESTION IMAGE

warm - up: duplicate factors $y=(x - 3)^2$ $y=(x + 1)(x - 3)^2$ $y=(x -…

Question

warm - up: duplicate factors
$y=(x - 3)^2$
$y=(x + 1)(x - 3)^2$
$y=(x - 3)^3$
$y=(x - 6)(x - 3)^2$
what do you notice?…
what do you wonder?…

Explanation:

Brief Explanations
  1. Observations (What do you notice?):
  • All functions have a repeated factor of $(x-3)^2$ or $(x-3)^3$, creating a "duplicate root" at $x=3$.
  • For the even power duplicate factor $(x-3)^2$ (first, second, fourth graphs): the graph touches the x-axis at $x=3$ and bounces off, without crossing through the axis.
  • For the odd power duplicate factor $(x-3)^3$ (third graph): the graph crosses the x-axis at $x=3$, but flattens out at the intercept (resembling a cubic shape at that point).
  • Additional linear factors (like $(x+1)$ or $(x-6)$) create other distinct x-intercepts where the graph crosses the axis normally.
  • The leading coefficient and degree determine the end behavior: even-degree graphs open upwards/downwards, odd-degree graphs go from $-\infty$ to $+\infty$ or vice versa.
  1. Questions (What do you wonder?):
  • How does the power of a duplicate factor affect the graph's shape at the intercept?
  • Can we generalize the behavior of graphs at intercepts with even/odd multiplicities?
  • How do additional factors change the overall shape and position of the graph without altering the behavior at the duplicate root?
  • What happens with higher powers of duplicate factors, like $(x-3)^4$ or $(x-3)^5$?

Answer:

What do you notice?
  • All graphs have a repeated root at $x=3$.
  • Graphs with even-powered duplicate factors ($(x-3)^2$) touch and bounce off the x-axis at $x=3$.
  • The graph with an odd-powered duplicate factor ($(x-3)^3$) crosses the x-axis at $x=3$ but flattens there.
  • Extra linear factors create separate, normal crossing x-intercepts.
  • End behavior depends on the polynomial's degree and leading coefficient.
What do you wonder?
  • How does the multiplicity (power) of a root affect the graph's curvature at the intercept?
  • Can this pattern of even/odd multiplicity behavior apply to all polynomial roots?
  • How do multiple duplicate roots interact to change a graph's shape?
  • What does the graph look like for very high multiplicities, such as $(x-3)^{10}$?