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discuss what you notice about the domain, range, intercepts, and asympt…

Question

discuss what you notice about the domain, range, intercepts, and asymptote of $y=2^{x}+3$.
domain: $(-\infty,\infty)$
range: $(-5,\infty)$
asymptote:

  1. graph y

Explanation:

Brief Explanations
  1. Domain: The function $y=2^x + 3$ is an exponential function. Exponential functions accept all real numbers as input, so there are no restrictions on $x$.
  2. Range: The parent function $2^x$ has a range of $(0, \infty)$. Adding 3 shifts the entire function upward by 3 units, so the lower bound of the range increases by 3.
  3. Intercepts:
  • x-intercept: Set $y=0$ and solve for $x$. $0=2^x + 3$ rearranges to $2^x=-3$, which has no real solution since exponential functions are always positive.
  • y-intercept: Set $x=0$ and solve for $y$. $y=2^0 + 3 = 1 + 3 = 4$.
  1. Asymptote: The parent function $2^x$ has a horizontal asymptote at $y=0$. Shifting the function up 3 units moves this asymptote up by 3 units.

Answer:

  • Domain: $(-\infty, \infty)$
  • Range: $(3, \infty)$
  • Intercepts: y-intercept at $(0, 4)$; no real x-intercept
  • Asymptote: Horizontal asymptote at $y=3$