First of all, I'm new to multivariable calculus... in a multivariable function, by assuming that its

Donald Johnson

Donald Johnson

Answered question

2022-01-04

First of all, I'm new to multivariable calculus... in a multivariable function, by assuming that its domain is going to be R2 and its image is going to be all real numbers, the graph of that function is defined as a subset of R3 in which the x and y axis are going to receive the inputs, and the output is going to be in z(x,y,f(x,y)) ? Is that correct? Will its graph, in this example, be some kind of surface?

Answer & Explanation

Edward Patten

Edward Patten

Beginner2022-01-05Added 38 answers

Yes. If such a f(x,y) is defined for all real pairs (x,y), for each such pair corresponds a single real value, which could be taken as the z coordinate of a point. This interpretation leads to a surface, as you suppose.
Using Wolfram Alpha, for instance, you can get the plots of the following functions. Guessing the surfaces before looking them up would be an interesting exercise.
f(x,y)=x
f(x,y)=y
f(x,y)=x+y
f(x,y)=xy

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