Find the Value of k for a Continuous Piecewise Function | Calculus Homework

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The discussion centers on finding the value of k for a continuous piecewise function defined as f(x) = (x-2)/(√(7x+2) - √(6x+4)) for x ≥ -2/7 and x ≠ 2, and f(x) = k for x = 2. Participants highlight the challenge of determining k, noting that direct substitution leads to an undefined expression (0/0) at x=2. To resolve this, they suggest rationalizing the expression by multiplying by the conjugate of the denominator to eliminate the undefined point. After simplification, it becomes clear that k should equal the limit of f(x) as x approaches 2, which is derived from the rationalized form. The conversation emphasizes the importance of careful algebraic manipulation to find the correct value of k for continuity.
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Homework Statement


We started piecewise functions in calculus and I'm finding it rather difficult. This question has had me stumped for a while. I'm quite well at finding domain and range, however :).

For what value of k is the following a continuous function

Homework Equations



f(x)= \frac {x-2}{\sqrt {7x+2} -\sqrt{6x+4}} if x \geq {\frac{-2}{7}} <br /> and x \neq 2
f(x) = k, if x=2

I hope this makes sense.

The Attempt at a Solution



The problem I am having is how I can find k - the constanst. I can't \frac {x-2}{\sqrt {7x+2} -\sqrt{6x+4}} = k since k cannot equal to 2.
 
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You want to cancel out or get rid of the denominator and rewrite the expression in a way where you don't get undefined when x=2. Try multiplying by the conjugate of the denominator.
 
Bohrok said:
You want to cancel out or get rid of the denominator and rewrite the expression in a way where you don't get undefined when x=2. Try multiplying by the conjugate of the denominator.

I was thinking of just rationalizing it. But what do I do with the k then?
 
If you graph f(x) on a graphing calculator, you would see that the graph clearly approaches a value as x gets close to 2. That is because when you plug x=2 into the function, you get 0/0 which usually, but not always, means that the function actually approaches a value as x gets close to the value that it can't be, the one that makes the function undefined. Once you find the value k that f(x) gets close to as x approaches 2, that will be the value to make the function continuous.

Think of x(x-1)/(x-1) which is undefined at x=1 and its graph has a "hole" there. If I do some canceling, I get just x. Then I can let x=1 and see that the graph of x(x-1)/(x-1), which coincides with the graph of x, gets close to 1 as x approaches 1, just like the graph of x when x gets close to 1.
 
So if I rationalize it, to remove the square roots, can I equate the 2? Then use x = -2/7?
 
I rationalized it:

\frac {x-2 \sqrt {7x+2} + x-2\sqrt{6x+4}}{x-2}\sqrt {7x+2} + x-2\sqrt{6x+4} = k

Substituting x=2, I get k=4.
 
k isn't 4. After multiplying by the conjugate of the denominator and simplifying, the x-2 should cancel; looks like you didn't distribute correctly.

\frac{x - 2}{\sqrt{7x + 2} - \sqrt{6x + 4}} * \frac{\sqrt{7x + 2} + \sqrt{6x + 4}}{\sqrt{7x + 2} + \sqrt{6x + 4}} = \frac{(x - 2)(\sqrt{7x + 2} + \sqrt{6x + 4})}{7x + 2 - (6x + 4)} = \frac{(x - 2)(\sqrt{7x + 2} + \sqrt{6x + 4})}{x - 2}
 
Last edited:
Ohhh, you don't multiply the x-2 into the conjugate? I understand. I got the x-2 on both the top and bottom, but I multiplied through. I see what I did wrong, thank you.
 

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