Asked by Greg
in the quadratic formula ax©÷+bx+c, what does the "a" stand for in ax©÷?
Answers
Answered by
drwls
I assume that ax© means a x^2.
a is a constant or "coefficient" that multiplies the x^2 term.
a is a constant or "coefficient" that multiplies the x^2 term.
Answered by
Anonymous
In the quadratic formula y=ax^2+b+x
Changing c moves it up and down.
Changing b changes the slope.
Changing a alters the curvature of the parabolic element.
The general rule is, that as the absolute value of "a",becomes greater than 1, the graph becomes steep or narrow.
Changing "c" only changes the vertical position of the graph, not it's shape.
Changing c moves it up and down.
Changing b changes the slope.
Changing a alters the curvature of the parabolic element.
The general rule is, that as the absolute value of "a",becomes greater than 1, the graph becomes steep or narrow.
Changing "c" only changes the vertical position of the graph, not it's shape.
There are no AI answers yet. The ability to request AI answers is coming soon!