Inverse Function of f(x) = 3squareroot 2x+1 & f(x) = x^2 + 2x - 8

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on finding the inverse functions of two equations: f(x) = 3√(2x + 1) and f(x) = x^2 + 2x - 8. The first attempt at finding the inverse for the square root function is questioned due to graph discrepancies, while the second attempt for the quadratic function encounters significant manipulation errors. Participants emphasize the importance of mastering basic equation transposition skills to successfully derive inverse functions. Additionally, the inverse relationships between logarithmic and exponential functions are clarified, highlighting that the inverse of a logarithm is an exponential and vice versa. Overall, the conversation underscores the necessity of foundational algebra skills for solving inverse function problems.
Struggling
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find the inverse function of:
f: [-1/2,infin) ---> R, Where F(x) = 3sqaureroot 2x+1

i got f(x) = 3squareroot 2x+1
x = 3squareroot 2(f-1)+1
f-1 = (x^3-1)/2 where (infin,-1/2]

is this right?
because when i graph it, it doesn't really look like the inverse

also i just ran into another problem
find the inverse function of:
f : [-1,infin) ---R, where f(x) = x^2 + 2x - 8

i did:
f(x) = x^2 - 2x - 8
x = (f-1)^2 - 2(f-1) - 8
x+8 = (f-1)^2 - 2(f-1)
and then everything goes wrong here


edit: ARGGGGH just more and more problems, is there any forumla or way of working out the inverse of Log's and exponentials? i can't find any in my books

thanks
 
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Struggling said:
is this right? because when i graph it, it doesn't really look like the inverse

No, nothing that you're doing there looks even close. You seem to really be at a loss to manipulate equations correctly. The basic skill you seem to be missing is that of transposing simple equations. Practice of this would be a good place for you to start.

For example, can you manipulate a simple equation like f = 9c/5 + 32 to express c in terms of f (this is called transposing btw). This is the thing you really need to lean before you can do the above problems (or just about anything else in maths actually).
 
is there any forumla or way of working out the inverse of Log's and exponentials?

The inverse of the log function is the exponential.
the inverse of the exponential is the log function.

For example

log_3 y = x

Inverse function is 3^n

3 ^ {log_3 y} = 3 ^ x [/itex]<br /> <br /> y = 3^x
 
f(x) = x^2 - 2x - 8
Rewrite x2-2x-8-f=0.

x=1+-sqrt(9+f)
 
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