Thomas' Calculus 13th Edition

Published by Pearson
ISBN 10: 0-32187-896-5
ISBN 13: 978-0-32187-896-0

Chapter 1: Functions - Questions to Guide Your Review - Page 36: 6

Answer

See below.

Work Step by Step

"Even" and "odd" terms come from the powers of x of functions defined with $f(x)=x^{n}$, where n is a nonnegative integer. Even n's result in graphs symmetric to the y-axis; odd n's result in graphs symmetric to the origin. A graph of a function consists of points (x, f(x)). The graphs of even functions are symmetric about the y-axis, meaning that $x$ and$ -x$ have the same function value; that is, $f(-x)=f(x)$. If $(x,y)$ lies on the graph, so does $(-x, y)$. The graphs of odd functions are symmetric about the origin; that is, $f(x)=-f(x)$ If $(x,y)$ lies on the graph, so does $(-x, -y).$ The advantage of finding out that a function is odd or even is that we can graph one side of the origin, and apply symmetry to graph the other side. (We calculate the function values for positive x by applying the formula for f(x). We do not need to calculate $f(-x)$ by applying the formula.) Examples: $f(x)=x^{2}$ is an even function, $f(x)=x^{3}$ is an odd function. $f(x)=(x-1)^{2}$ is neither odd nor even because, for example: $f(2)=1,$ but $f(-2)=9$ Since $f(-x)\neq f(x)$ for all x, the function is not even. Since $f(-x)\neq-f(x)$ for all x, the function is not odd.
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