Solutions to Try Its
1.
2. using the variable for passing,
3.
4. or
5. , so the graph intersects the vertical axis at . when and so the graph intersects the horizontal axis at and .
6.
7. or ; in interval notation, this would be
Solutions to Odd-Numbered Exercises
1. Isolate the absolute value term so that the equation is of the form . Form one equation by setting the expression inside the absolute value symbol, , equal to the expression on the other side of the equation, . Form a second equation by setting equal to the opposite of the expression on the other side of the equation, -B. Solve each equation for the variable.
3. The graph of the absolute value function does not cross the -axis, so the graph is either completely above or completely below the -axis.
5. First determine the boundary points by finding the solution(s) of the equation. Use the boundary points to form possible solution intervals. Choose a test value in each interval to determine which values satisfy the inequality.
7.
9.
11.
13.
15.
17.
19.
21. No solution
23.
25.
27. ; no -intercepts
29.
31.
33.
35.
37.
39.
41.
43.
45.
47.
49.
51.
53. range:
55. intercepts:
57.
59. There is no solution for that will keep the function from having a -intercept. The absolute value function always crosses the -intercept when .
61.
63.
Candela Citations
- Precalculus. Authored by: Jay Abramson, et al.. Provided by: OpenStax. Located at: http://cnx.org/contents/fd53eae1-fa23-47c7-bb1b-972349835c3c@5.175. License: CC BY: Attribution. License Terms: Download For Free at : http://cnx.org/contents/fd53eae1-fa23-47c7-bb1b-972349835c3c@5.175.