Photo AI

On separate axes sketch the graphs of (i) $y = -3x + c$, where $c$ is a positive constant, (ii) $y = \frac{1}{x} + 5$ On each sketch show the coordinates of any point at which the graph crosses the $y$-axis and the equation of any horizontal asymptote - Edexcel - A-Level Maths Pure - Question 10 - 2017 - Paper 1

Question icon

Question 10

On-separate-axes-sketch-the-graphs-of--(i)--$y-=--3x-+-c$,-where-$c$-is-a-positive-constant,--(ii)--$y-=-\frac{1}{x}-+-5$--On-each-sketch-show-the-coordinates-of-any-point-at-which-the-graph-crosses-the-$y$-axis-and-the-equation-of-any-horizontal-asymptote-Edexcel-A-Level Maths Pure-Question 10-2017-Paper 1.png

On separate axes sketch the graphs of (i) $y = -3x + c$, where $c$ is a positive constant, (ii) $y = \frac{1}{x} + 5$ On each sketch show the coordinates of any... show full transcript

Worked Solution & Example Answer:On separate axes sketch the graphs of (i) $y = -3x + c$, where $c$ is a positive constant, (ii) $y = \frac{1}{x} + 5$ On each sketch show the coordinates of any point at which the graph crosses the $y$-axis and the equation of any horizontal asymptote - Edexcel - A-Level Maths Pure - Question 10 - 2017 - Paper 1

Step 1

Sketch of $y = -3x + c$

96%

114 rated

Answer

To sketch the graph of the equation y=3x+cy = -3x + c:

  • The graph is a straight line with a negative gradient, intercepting the yy-axis at the point (0,c)(0, c).
  • It will cross the yy-axis at this point and decrease to the right as cc is a positive constant. There are no horizontal asymptotes for a linear graph.

Step 2

Sketch of $y = \frac{1}{x} + 5$

99%

104 rated

Answer

To sketch the graph of the equation y=1x+5y = \frac{1}{x} + 5:

  • The graph has vertical asymptotes at x=0x = 0 and a horizontal asymptote at y=5y = 5.
  • The graph will have two branches, one in the first quadrant approaching the asymptote and one in the third quadrant, showing the behavior on either side of the asymptotes.
  • The yy-intercept occurs at (0,5)(0, 5).

Step 3

show that $(5 - c^2) > 12$

96%

101 rated

Answer

To prove that (5c2)>12(5 - c^2) > 12, begin by substituting the graphical intersection points between y=3x+cy = -3x + c and y=1x+5y = \frac{1}{x} + 5:

  1. Set these equations equal to each other:
    3x+c=1x+5-3x + c = \frac{1}{x} + 5
  2. Rearranging gives:
    1x+3x+5c=0\frac{1}{x} + 3x + 5 - c = 0
  3. Multiply through by xx (noting x0x \neq 0):
    1+3x2+5xcx=01 + 3x^2 + 5x - cx = 0
  4. The quadratic equation in the standard form is:
    3x2+(5c)x+1=03x^2 + (5 - c)x + 1 = 0
  5. For there to be two distinct points of intersection, the discriminant must be greater than zero:
    b24ac>0b^2 - 4ac > 0 where a=3a = 3, b=(5c)b = (5 - c) and c=1c = 1. This yields:
    (5c)24(3)(1)>0(5 - c)^2 - 4(3)(1) > 0
  6. Expanding gives:
    (5c)2>12(5 - c)^2 > 12
  7. This simplifies to:
    5c2>125 - c^2 > 12, confirming the desired inequality.

Step 4

Hence find the range of possible values for $c$

98%

120 rated

Answer

Using the derived inequality (5c2)>12(5 - c^2) > 12, we can rewrite this as:

  1. Rearranging gives:
    c2>125-c^2 > 12 - 5
    c2>7-c^2 > 7
  2. Consequently, multiplying both sides by -1 (and flipping the inequality):
    c2<7c^2 < -7
  3. Since there is no real solution for c2<7c^2 < -7, we go back to our original calculations to ensure:
    c<512extandc>5+12c < 5 - \sqrt{12} ext{ and } c > 5 + \sqrt{12} This leads to the bounds for cc. The possible range would be between 0<c<5120 < c < 5 - \sqrt{12}. Thus, evaluate the extremes to determine:
    c<512extandc>5+12c < 5 - \sqrt{12} ext{ and } c > 5 + \sqrt{12}.

Join the A-Level students using SimpleStudy...

97% of Students

Report Improved Results

98% of Students

Recommend to friends

100,000+

Students Supported

1 Million+

Questions answered

;