What Happens to the Graph of y=x^z as z Changes?

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The discussion focuses on understanding the graph of the function y=x^z as the exponent z varies. It highlights that for integer values of z, the graph produces different shapes, such as parabolas for z=2 and cubic curves for z=3, while also generating a surface in three dimensions. The participants note that for negative values of x, the function only yields real numbers when y is an integer, leading to confusion about the graph's behavior in those regions. They explore the implications of fractional exponents, which can result in imaginary numbers for negative x values. The conversation emphasizes the complexity of visualizing this function and its behavior near the axes, particularly around the saddle point.
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I don't have a 3D graphing program, so I'm trying to figure out the graph of y=x^z on paper.

y=x^2 forms a parabola while y=x^3 forms a ... other thing. There's got to be some sensical values to y as the exponent climbs through the values between them.
 
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This function generates a surface rather than a curve. You can imagine it by considering different values of z, for example 0, 1, 2. At z = 0, you have x^0 and hence y = 1. At z = 1, you have y = x and at z = 2, y = x^2. Geometrically speaking, the so called surface will be so that it has the these functions of y as cross sections at the respective values of z. It's pretty easy to visualize on the positive side of z, for z < 1, and for x > 1, the surface concave in respect of X axis. For x < 1, the surface is convex. For z > 1, it's the inverse.
 
I'm looking at a graph of z=x^y right now using 'Grapher' on the mac.

It's not an easy function to visualize by drawing. It's got a 1st order saddle point.

It's pretty cool in the region about the x-z axes intersect.
 
christianjb said:
I'm looking at a graph of z=x^y right now using 'Grapher' on the mac.

It's not an easy function to visualize by drawing. It's got a 1st order saddle point.

It's pretty cool in the region about the x-z axes intersect.
Mind sending me a screen grab?
 
DaveC426913 said:
Mind sending me a screen grab?

What's the easiest way to send it?
 
See if this works.
 

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Here's another view, and with contours.

You can see the saddle point quite clearly.
 

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The best way would be that Dave pm's you his email, and then you send it the picture to him as an attachment.
 
Or upload it on Imageshack and post the link so we can all see it.
 
  • #11
It does, though without labels I have little idea what the graph is showing. I'm presuming the x-axis runs top right to bottom left and the y-axis is vertical.

But if that graph were somewhere showing y=x^3, I would expect to see one of the cross sections symmetrical about (0,0) yet nowhere do I see any poiints below y=0
 
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  • #12
DaveC426913 said:
It does, though without labels I have little idea what the graph is showing. I'm presuming the x-axis runs top right to bottom left and the y-axis is vertical.

But if that graph were somewhere showing y=x^3, I would expect to see one of the cross sections symmetrical about (0,0) yet nowhere do I see any poiints below y=0

The function is z=x^y The axis going out of the page (up) is the z axis. The function is not defined for -ve values of x.

Edit: This may be a little confusing, but e.g. (-1.4)^1.99 is not a real number, whereas (-1.4)^2 is. Thus the surface only exists for x>0
 
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  • #13
christianjb said:
Edit: This may be a little confusing, but e.g. (-1.4)^1.99 is not a real number,
So is it imaginary?


In the green graph: +x is upper left + y points lower left, right?

Shouldn't the slice through y at y=2 manifest as a parabola? I'm just not seeing it.
 
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  • #14
Oh now I see it. At y=2, x<0 is not rendered on the graph.

So, when y is fractional does it create imaginary numbers?
 

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  • #15
DaveC426913 said:
So is it imaginary?


In the green graph: +x is upper left + y points lower left, right?

Shouldn't the slice through y at y=2 manifest as a parabola? I'm just not seeing it.

No, you won't see it because x^y in the -ve x half is only real for integer values of y. It won't make a surface.

Again, for -ve values of x, x^2 exists, but x^1.999 doesn't (at least it's not real).

You will only see x^y for x>0.
 
  • #16
DaveC426913 said:
Oh now I see it. At y=2, x<0 is not rendered on the graph.

So, when y is fractional does it create imaginary numbers?

Exactly. Try doing -4 ^ 1.9 on a calculator. It will return an error.

And, when y is any non integer, x is -ve, x^y does not exist on the real number line.
 
  • #17
christianjb said:
Exactly. Try doing -4 ^ 1.9 on a calculator. It will return an error.

And, when y is any non integer, x is -ve, x^y does not exist on the real number line.
Right. This is actually what I'm after. My suspicion is that, as y changes from 2 to 3, the curve actually jumps from +z to -z - but since it's a continuum, that curve is going somewhere, and I think where it's going is into the imaginary space - as if, conceptually, the imaginary number space were a sort of "fourth dimension".
 

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