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3.5 Operations of Functions Objectives: 1.Form sum, difference, product, and quotient functions, and find their domains. 2.Form composite functions and.

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Presentation on theme: "3.5 Operations of Functions Objectives: 1.Form sum, difference, product, and quotient functions, and find their domains. 2.Form composite functions and."— Presentation transcript:

1 3.5 Operations of Functions Objectives: 1.Form sum, difference, product, and quotient functions, and find their domains. 2.Form composite functions and find their domains.

2 Sum and Difference Functions The domain of the sum or difference functions is the set of all real numbers that are in both the domain of f AND the domain of g.

3 Example #1 Sum & Difference Functions A.Write a rule for.

4 Example #1 Sum & Difference Functions B.Find the domain of each. Domain of f : Domain of g : Domain of f + g and f – g : The set of all x such that x = 1 or x ≤ −1

5 Product & Quotient Functions The domain of the product function fg is the set of all real numbers that are in both the domain of f AND the domain of g. The domain of the quotient function f/g is the same as the product so long as g(x) ≠ 0.

6 Example #2 Product & Quotient Functions A.Write a rule for.

7 Example #2 Product & Quotient Functions B.Find the domain of each. Domain of f : Domain of g : For the quotient function, g(x) ≠ 0. The domain of fg is the set of all x such that x ≥ 2 The domain of f/g is the set of all x such that x > 2, the only difference being that 2 is excluded from the domain of fg.

8 Products with Constant Functions

9 Example #3 Products with Constant Functions

10 Composite Functions

11 Example #4 Composite Functions A. B.

12 Example #4 Composite Functions C. D. OR

13 Example #5 Finding the Domain of Composite Functions A. B. C.State the domain of each composite function. First identify the domain of the inside function. Domain of f (g(x)) : Since the domain of g is all real numbers, then the only restriction is that of the composite. Domain of g(f (x)) : Since the domain of f has restrictions and the composite doesn’t, then it shares its domain with f, x ≥ 2.

14 Example #6 Writing a Function as a Composite A. Write h(x) as a composite function two different ways. B.

15 Example #7 Compositions with Absolute Value Functions Graph f, and the composite function Describe the relationship between the graphs of f and in terms of transformations. In the composite function, the graph of f was reflected over the y-axis.

16 Example #8 Application A cylindrical container is being filled with water. After t minutes, the height of the water in the container is inches. The volume V of the water in the container is given by. Express the volume as a function of time by finding, and compute the volume at t = 2 minutes.


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