Precalculus (10th Edition)

Published by Pearson
ISBN 10: 0-32197-907-9
ISBN 13: 978-0-32197-907-0

Chapter 1 - Graphs - Chapter Review - Review Exercises - Page 41: 14

Answer

Center = (1, -2) Radius = 3 units Intercepts: x-axis: $(1+\sqrt{5}, 0)$ and $(1-\sqrt5, 0)$ y-axis: $(0, -2 + 2\sqrt{2})$ and $(0, -2 - 2\sqrt{2})$ Graph on attached image

Work Step by Step

We have, $x^{2}+y^{2}-2x+4y-4 = 0$ $(x-1)^{2}-1+(y+2)^{2}-4-4=0$ $[\because (x-1)^{2}-1 = x^{2}-2x \space and\space (y+2)^{2}-4 = y^{2}+4y]$ $\implies (x-1)^{2}+(y+2)^{2}=9$ This is of the form, $(x-h)^{2}+(y-k)^{2}=r^2$, where (h,k) is the center and r is the radius. $\therefore center = (1, -2)\space and\space radius, r = \sqrt{9} = 3$ To find x-intercepts, replace y with 0 in the original equations, and solve for x. $\implies x^{2}-2x-4 = 0 \implies $This is a quadratic equation, with a = 1, b = -2, c = -4 Using the formula, $x = \frac{-b \pm \sqrt{b^{2}-4ac}}{2}$ $x = \frac{2 \pm \sqrt{(-2)^{2}-4(-4)}}{2}$ $\quad = \frac{2 \pm \sqrt{20}}{2} = 1 \pm \sqrt5$ To find y-intercepts, replace x with 0 in the original equations, and solve for y. $\implies y^{2}+4y-4=0 \implies $ This is a quafratic equation, with a = 1, b = 4, c = -4 Using the aforementioned formula, $x = \frac{-4 \pm \sqrt{4^{2}-4(-4)}}{2}$ $\quad = \frac{-4 \pm \sqrt{32}}{2} = -2 \pm 2\sqrt{2}$
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