Question Regarding Function Graphs (1 Viewer)

AsuTeksu

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Howdy All!

I have a question regarding function graphs as specified in the title above.

I've been looking at HSC Papers and Question 10 always seems to stump me ;-; and for that matter, any question that contains similar content.

Question 10 for 2020 can be seen below:

Screenshot 2023-10-13 at 10.01.12 am.png

Question 10 for 2022 can be seen below:

Screenshot 2023-10-13 at 10.01.45 am.png


When I see questions like this, I'm really unsure of how to answer them, or better yet, how to even approach them.

If anyone could help out and let me know how to solve them or a general approach I could adopt, it would be greatly appreciated!

Thanks in advance c:
 

SadCeliac

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Stationary points would occur when h'(x) = 0, since h(x) = f(g(x)) then h'(x) = f'(g(x)) x g'(x) (using chain rule) so either we need to find points when g'(x) = 0 OR when f'(g(x)) = 0.

Clearly g'(x) = 0 occurs at x = 3 (ie g'(3) = 0) since there is a stationary point. Furthermore f'(x) = 0 occurs roughly at x = 1 (ie f'(1) = 0), but since g(x) needs to be the input, we need to find when g(x) = 1. When looking at the graph g(x) = 1 when x = 1.5 and x = 4.5.

So now we have three solutions that produce stationary points for h(x), the points being x = 1, x = 1.5 and x = 4.5.




I would just get a couple of points: in g(f(x)) the output of f(x) serves as the input of g(x). So let's see the point x = 1: f(1) = 2 (roughly) and since 2 is the output of f(x) this will now be the input for g(x), giving us g(2) = 1 (roughly). From this we get the result that h(1) = 1, which would eliminate C and D.

Just keep repeating this process to get a couple more points, but anyways I think the answer would be B since in A, you can see that h(-5) = -1 (roughly). However, that doesn't make sense since at x = -5: f(-5) = 25 (roughly) and g(25) = 1 (roughly), not -1.
@temporarylol why did you delete all of your messages 😭 (except for the write a word starting with the last letter thread messages 😭)
 

AsuTeksu

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Stationary points would occur when h'(x) = 0, since h(x) = f(g(x)) then h'(x) = f'(g(x)) x g'(x) (using chain rule) so either we need to find points when g'(x) = 0 OR when f'(g(x)) = 0.

Clearly g'(x) = 0 occurs at x = 3 (ie g'(3) = 0) since there is a stationary point. Furthermore f'(x) = 0 occurs roughly at x = 1 (ie f'(1) = 0), but since g(x) needs to be the input, we need to find when g(x) = 1. When looking at the graph g(x) = 1 when x = 1.5 and x = 4.5.

So now we have three solutions that produce stationary points for h(x), the points being x = 1, x = 1.5 and x = 4.5.




I would just get a couple of points: in g(f(x)) the output of f(x) serves as the input of g(x). So let's see the point x = 1: f(1) = 2 (roughly) and since 2 is the output of f(x) this will now be the input for g(x), giving us g(2) = 1 (roughly). From this we get the result that h(1) = 1, which would eliminate C and D.

Just keep repeating this process to get a couple more points, but anyways I think the answer would be B since in A, you can see that h(-5) = -1 (roughly). However, that doesn't make sense since at x = -5: f(-5) = 25 (roughly) and g(25) = 1 (roughly), not -1.
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Luukas.2

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View attachment 40447

Question 10 of the 2020 Advance Maths HSC was a challenging question.

There are (at least) two approaches that will work here. One is to use theory and differential calculus, which is quick but sophisticated. The other is to take a more straight-forward but longer approach.

Starting with the second of these:


Plotting these points and adding a smooth curve shows that increases from its y-intercept to a maximum somewhere near , then decreases to a minimum at ,and then rises again to a maximum somewhere near , before decreasing again towards the x-axis, which is a horizontal asymptote. There are clearly 3 stationary points in the domain of interest.

The more theoretical approach is:


Consider : The graph of shows a parabola-like shape with a single stationary point at . Thus, will have a stationary point at .

Consider : The graph of shows a maximum turning point at about (1, 2), meaning that , and so stationary points will occur whenever . The line crosses the graph of twice in the domain of interest, somewhere near and .

It follows that the graph of will show three stationary points for
 

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