1 / 12

Unit 3 Lesson 4 - TEXTBOOK 5.2 & 12.1 D IRECT AND INVERSE VARIATION

Unit 3 Lesson 4 - TEXTBOOK 5.2 & 12.1 D IRECT AND INVERSE VARIATION. Variation relates to 2 variables: like x and y or age and height. (same as the slope or the constant rate of change). ...so, DIRECT VARIATION is a special name for the lines that include

Télécharger la présentation

Unit 3 Lesson 4 - TEXTBOOK 5.2 & 12.1 D IRECT AND INVERSE VARIATION

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Unit 3 Lesson 4 - TEXTBOOK 5.2 & 12.1 DIRECT AND INVERSE VARIATION Variation relates to 2 variables: like x and y or age and height (same as the slope or the constant rate of change) ...so, DIRECT VARIATION is a special name for the lines that include ( 0 , 0 ) - the origin - in their solutions. This is because there is no # added or subtracted at the end of the equation. Examples: y = 5x y = -1/2x y = .05x

  2. Example 1 proves that the k is the same thing as slope and rate of change.

  3. Example 2 shows you that the origin is ALWAYS a solution (so always on the line!) It should be used with the slope to graph as shown below.

  4. QUICK PRACTICE on handout

  5. Finally, it gets a little more difficult! Example 4 walks through how you write and solve these types of equations... * Since the k or constant is the same as the Rate of Change or Slope, you can think of this as using the slope formula. (7, 28) and (0,0) so 28-0/7-0 = 4/1 For b. plug the value given into the equation you wrote.

  6. class example

  7. Try these... more class examples, or ticket out the door. 7. k = 4 so y = 4x and x = 8 8. k = 3 so y = 3x and x = 5 9. k = -2 so y = -2x and y = 12 10. k = -3 so y = -3x and y = 15 11. k = 4 so y = 4x and y = 24 12. k = 2/3 so y = 2/3x and x = -24

  8. HOMEWORK: PRACTICE WORKBOOK 5-2 # 1-9

  9. Direct Variation equations often occur outside Math class... Example: C = dπ d = rt

More Related