Cubic asymptotes in rational functions?

jann95
Messages
4
Reaction score
0
I just got this assignment for math and the question was is it possible to have a cubic asymptote in a rational function. If so explain how and where.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Physics news on Phys.org
jann95 said:
I just got this assignment for math and the question was is it possible to have a cubic asymptote in a rational function. If so explain how and where.

What is a "cubic" asymptote?
 
im not really sure, but we have to figure it out. Its like vertical, horizontal and oblique asymptotes in rational function. I have to figure out if there could be a cubic asymptote. I know that there could be a quadratic asymptote, but I am not sure about cubic.
 
Then, what is a "quadratic" asymptote? Those terms is unfamiliar to me regarding asymptotes.
 
A quadratic asymptote is an asymptote on a rational function which looks like a parabola. So if you are graphing a rational function with a quadratic asymptote is doesn't pass through. Just like the oblique, vertical and horizontal asymptotes.
 
jann95 said:
A quadratic asymptote is an asymptote on a rational function which looks like a parabola. So if you are graphing a rational function with a quadratic asymptote is doesn't pass through. Just like the oblique, vertical and horizontal asymptotes.

Asymptotes don't "look like parabolas". They are straight lines. And I am certain your text doesn't define a quadratic asymptote as one that "looks like a parabola". Tell me, word for word, what your text definition of a quadratic asymptote is. How can you hope to solve a problem if you don't know the definitions?
 
For example 2x^3/x-1, when you divide 2x^3 by x-1 you will get a quadratic function, when you graph that function, that will be the quadratic asymptote.
 
I found an example of a cubic asymptote on http://www.webgraphing.com/graphing_basic.jsp
The rational function was f(x)= (2x^4)/(x-1).
Now I am curious if you can have asymptotes of any degree...
 
Last edited by a moderator:
I haven't run across this term (cubic asymptote) before, but I would guess that it means that for large |x|, the graph approaches that of some cubic polynomial.
 
  • #10
Mark44 said:
I haven't run across this term (cubic asymptote) before, but I would guess that it means that for large |x|, the graph approaches that of some cubic polynomial.

Yes, that is the obvious guess, and similarly for a "quadratic" asymptote. But it annoys me when posters won't look up definitions in their own texts and instead abandon the thread as jann95 has apparently done.
 
  • #12
LCKurtz said:
Asymptotes don't "look like parabolas". They are straight lines. And I am certain your text doesn't define a quadratic asymptote as one that "looks like a parabola". Tell me, word for word, what your text definition of a quadratic asymptote is. How can you hope to solve a problem if you don't know the definitions?
No, and asymptote does NOT have to be a straight line. Any curve can be an asymptote to a graph. The only requirement is that the graph, as x-> a, must get arbitrarily close to the curve without reaching it.
 
  • #13
HallsofIvy said:
No, and asymptote does NOT have to be a straight line. Any curve can be an asymptote to a graph. The only requirement is that the graph, as x-> a, must get arbitrarily close to the curve without reaching it.

To quote from Wikipedia which, as we all know, is the ultimate source of correctness in mathematics :rolleyes::

"More generally, one curve is a curvilinear asymptote of another (as opposed to a linear asymptote) if the distance between the two curves tends to zero as they tend to infinity, although usually the term asymptote by itself is reserved for linear asymptotes."
 

Similar threads

Back
Top