Avery and Sasha were comparing parabola graphs on their calculators. Avery had drawn y = 0

Alannah Short

Alannah Short

Answered question

2022-06-10

Avery and Sasha were comparing parabola graphs on their calculators. Avery had drawn y = 0.001 x 2 in the window 1000 x 1000 and 0 y 1000 , and Sasha had drawn y = x 2 in the window k x k and 0 y k . Except for scale markings on the axes, the graphs looked the same! What was the value of k?

Answer & Explanation

Daniel Valdez

Daniel Valdez

Beginner2022-06-11Added 19 answers

Step 1
The original parabola y = .001 x 2 touches the upper right and upper left corners of the given graphing area. For the second parabola, we need the same behavior; but the upper right corner should be (k,k). For this to occur, you need k 2 = k. So k = 0 or 1; but k = 0 doesn't work. So k = 1.
vrotterigzl

vrotterigzl

Beginner2022-06-12Added 3 answers

Step 1
Your two students' answers are how I myself solved the problem.
A more intuitive explanation? How about the observation that with the appropriate x- and y- scale, every upward-facing parabola looks identical; likewise, every downward-facing parabola? In other words, to sketch a quadratic function, I might start by sketching a prototypical upward/downward- facing parabola (depending on the leading coefficient's sign) before drawing in the reference frame (the axes) at the appropriate position.
The given problem is analogous: each curve is being drawn before determining its location (the scale markings).

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