Rational Functions: Cheat Sheet

Essential Concepts

Rational Functions

Definition

A rational function is a function that can be written as the quotient of two polynomials:

[latex]f(x) = \dfrac{P(x)}{Q(x)} = \dfrac{a_px^p + a_{p-1}x^{p-1} + \cdots + a_1x + a_0}{b_qx^q + b_{q-1}x^{q-1} + \cdots + b_1x + b_0}[/latex]

where [latex]Q(x) \ne 0[/latex]

Arrow Notation

Arrow notation describes the behavior of a function as inputs or outputs approach specific values:

Symbol Meaning
[latex]x \to a^-[/latex] [latex]x[/latex] approaches [latex]a[/latex] from the left ([latex]x < a[/latex] but close to [latex]a[/latex])
[latex]x \to a^+[/latex] [latex]x[/latex] approaches [latex]a[/latex] from the right ([latex]x > a[/latex] but close to [latex]a[/latex])
[latex]x \to \infty[/latex] [latex]x[/latex] increases without bound
[latex]x \to -\infty[/latex] [latex]x[/latex] decreases without bound
[latex]f(x) \to \infty[/latex] output increases without bound
[latex]f(x) \to -\infty[/latex] output decreases without bound
[latex]f(x) \to a[/latex] output approaches [latex]a[/latex]

Domain of Rational Functions

The domain includes all real numbers except those that cause the denominator to equal zero.

To find the domain:

  1. Set the denominator equal to zero
  2. Solve for [latex]x[/latex]
  3. Exclude these values from the domain

Vertical Asymptotes

A vertical asymptote is a vertical line [latex]x = a[/latex] where the graph tends toward positive or negative infinity as inputs approach [latex]a[/latex].

To find vertical asymptotes:

  1. Factor the numerator and denominator
  2. Cancel common factors
  3. Set the remaining denominator equal to zero and solve
  4. These values are vertical asymptotes

Removable Discontinuities (Holes)

A removable discontinuity occurs when a factor appears in both the numerator and denominator.

To find holes:

  1. Factor numerator and denominator completely
  2. Identify common factors
  3. Set the common factor equal to zero and solve
  4. This [latex]x[/latex]-value is the location of the hole

Horizontal Asymptotes

A horizontal asymptote is a horizontal line [latex]y = b[/latex] that the graph approaches as [latex]x \to \pm\infty[/latex].

Compare degrees of numerator and denominator:

Case 1: Degree of numerator < degree of denominator

    • Horizontal asymptote: [latex]y = 0[/latex]

Case 2: Degree of numerator = degree of denominator

    • Horizontal asymptote: [latex]y = \frac{a_n}{b_n}[/latex] (ratio of leading coefficients)

Case 3: Degree of numerator > degree of denominator by 1

    • No horizontal asymptote; has a slant asymptote instead

Slant (Oblique) Asymptotes

A slant asymptote occurs when the degree of the numerator is exactly one more than the degree of the denominator.

To find the slant asymptote:

  1. Divide the numerator by the denominator using polynomial long division
  2. The quotient (ignoring the remainder) is the equation of the slant asymptote

Intercepts of Rational Functions

x-intercepts: Set the numerator equal to zero and solve (as long as the denominator is not also zero at those points)

y-intercept: Evaluate [latex]f(0)[/latex], if defined

Graphing Rational Functions

Steps to graph:

  1. Simplify by factoring and canceling common factors
  2. Find the domain (exclude values where denominator = 0)
  3. Identify vertical asymptotes and holes
  4. Find horizontal or slant asymptote
  5. Find intercepts (x-intercepts and y-intercept)
  6. Plot key points near asymptotes if needed
  7. Sketch the graph using asymptotes and intercepts

Writing Rational Functions from Graphs

If a rational function has:

  • x-intercepts at [latex]x_1, x_2, \ldots, x_n[/latex]
  • vertical asymptotes at [latex]v_1, v_2, \ldots, v_m[/latex]

Then: [latex]f(x) = a\dfrac{(x - x_1)^{p_1}(x - x_2)^{p_2} \cdots (x - x_n)^{p_n}}{(x - v_1)^{q_1}(x - v_2)^{q_2} \cdots (x - v_m)^{q_m}}[/latex]

where [latex]p_i[/latex] and [latex]q_i[/latex] are determined by graph behavior, and [latex]a[/latex] is found using a point on the graph.

Variation

Direct Variation

[latex]y[/latex] varies directly with [latex]x^n[/latex] if:

[latex]y = kx^n[/latex]

where [latex]k[/latex] is the constant of variation (nonzero).

Inverse Variation

[latex]y[/latex] varies inversely with [latex]x^n[/latex] if:

[latex]y = \dfrac{k}{x^n}[/latex]

where [latex]k[/latex] is the constant of variation (nonzero).

Joint Variation

Joint variation occurs when a variable depends on multiple other variables.

Examples:

  • [latex]x[/latex] varies directly with [latex]y[/latex] and [latex]z[/latex]: [latex]x = kyz[/latex]
  • [latex]x[/latex] varies directly with [latex]y[/latex] and inversely with [latex]z[/latex]: [latex]x = \frac{ky}{z}[/latex]

Rational Equations and Inequalities

Solving Rational Equations

A rational equation contains at least one rational expression with a variable in the denominator.

Steps:

  1. Factor all denominators
  2. Find and exclude values that make denominators zero
  3. Find the LCD (Least Common Denominator)
  4. Multiply the entire equation by the LCD
  5. Solve the resulting equation
  6. Check solutions in the original equation

Important: Always check that solutions don’t make any denominator zero. These must be excluded.

Solving Rational Inequalities

A rational inequality contains a rational expression with an inequality symbol.

Steps:

  1. Write the inequality with zero on one side
  2. Identify critical values:
    • Zeros of numerator
    • Zeros of denominator (excluded values)
  3. Create a sign chart testing each interval
  4. Determine which intervals satisfy the inequality
  5. Write the solution using interval notation

Key Equations

Rational function [latex]f(x) = \dfrac{P(x)}{Q(x)}[/latex], where [latex]Q(x) \ne 0[/latex]
Direct variation [latex]y = kx^n[/latex], [latex]k[/latex] is a nonzero constant
Inverse variation [latex]y = \dfrac{k}{x^n}[/latex], [latex]k[/latex] is a nonzero constant

Glossary

arrow notation

a way to symbolically represent the local and end behavior of a function by using arrows to indicate that an input or output approaches a value

constant of variation

the nonzero value [latex]k[/latex] that helps define the relationship between variables in direct or inverse variation

direct variation

a relationship where one quantity is a constant multiplied by another quantity; as one quantity increases, so does the other

horizontal asymptote

a horizontal line [latex]y = b[/latex] where the graph approaches the line as the inputs increase or decrease without bound

inverse variation

a relationship where one quantity is a constant divided by another quantity; as one quantity increases, the other decreases

inversely proportional

a relationship where one quantity is a constant divided by the other quantity

joint variation

a relationship where a variable varies directly or inversely with multiple variables

rational equation

an equation that contains at least one rational expression with a variable in the denominator

rational function

a function that can be written as the ratio of two polynomials

rational inequality

an inequality that contains at least one rational expression with a variable in the denominator

removable discontinuity

a single point at which a function is undefined that, if filled in, would make the function continuous; appears as a hole on the graph

varies directly

a relationship where one quantity is a constant multiplied by another quantity

varies inversely

a relationship where one quantity is a constant divided by another quantity

vertical asymptote

a vertical line [latex]x = a[/latex] where the graph tends toward positive or negative infinity as the inputs approach [latex]a[/latex]