PREREQUISITE/PRE-CALCULUS REVIEW

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PREREQUISITE/PRE-CALCULUS REVIEW Introduction This review sheet is a summary of most of the main topics that you should already be familiar with from your pre-calculus and trigonometry course(s), and which I expect you to know how to use and be able to follow if I use them in passing. If there are topics with which you don t feel as comfortable, suggested homework problems can be found on the web page, and we can also go over them during office hours. I ve tried to include most major topics, but there s a very good chance some things have been overlooked. Feel free to ask me if you don t see a concept listed and are wondering if it will come up in the class. Appendix B - Coordinate Geometry What you need to know from this section: () How to plot (x, y) coordinates. (2) Distance Formula: The distance between two points P = (x, y ) and P 2 = (x 2, y 2 ) in the xy-plane is P P 2 = (x 2 x ) 2 + (y 2 y ) 2 (3) Equation of a Circle: An equation of the circle with center (h, k) and radius r is (x h) 2 (y k) 2 = r 2 [Note, if you take the square root of both sides of this equation, you get the distance formula: the distance between the center (h, k) and a point (x, y) on the circle is r.] In particular, if the center is at the origin (0, 0), this equation becomes x 2 + y 2 = r 2 (4) Completing the Square: This comes up when dealing with circles and other conic sections, both in this class and later in Calculus 3. Example 2 on page A9 shows how this can come up in a problem. (5) Slope of a Line: The slope of a nonvertical line passing through the points P = (x, y ) and P 2 = (x 2, y 2 ) is m = y x = y 2 y = rise x 2 x run (6) The Equation of a Line: (a) Point-Slope Form: An equation of the line with slope m that passes through the point (x, y ) is y y = m(x x ) (b) Slope-Intercept Form: An equation of the line with slope m and y-intercept b is y = mx + b (you often have to use a known point on the line to solve for b). These can be used interchangeably, but the point-slope form tends to arise more naturally in many of the problems we ll be looking at (although we will still solve for y at the end of the problem). (7) Parallel and Perpendicular Lines: (a) Two nonvertical lines are said to be parallel if and only if they have the same slope (b) Two lines with slopes m and m 2 are said to be perpendicular if and only if m m 2 =, i.e., if their slopes are negative reciprocals: m 2 = m or, equivalently, m = m 2 (8) How to sketch regions in the plane.

2 PREREQUISITE/PRE-CALCULUS REVIEW What you need to know from these sections: () The Vertical Line Test (see page 7 in the book). (2) The graphs of the functions shown in Figure :. &.2 - Functions (a) Constant, f(x) = a (a =.75 shown). range is b. (b) Linear, f(x) = ax + b (y = 2x + shown). Domain is R, range is R. (c) Square, f(x) = x 2 range is [0, ). (d) Cubic, f(x) = x 3 range is R. (f) Cube-root, f(x) = 3 x range is R. (e) Squareroot, f(x) = x Domain is [0, ), range is [0, ). (g) Reciprocal, f(x) = x Domain is (, 0) (0, ), range is (, 0) (0, ). (h) Absolute value, f(x) = x range is [0, ). Figure. Graphs of Basic Functions You Should Know (3) What a Difference Quotient of a function f(x) is (and how to compute/simplify them): f(x + h) f(x) f(x) f(a) or h x a (4) How to plot piecewise defined functions. (5) What it means for a function to be even ( f( x) = f(x) ) or odd ( f( x) = f(x) ) - these will be used occasionally. (6) What it means for a function to be increasing or decreasing (this will come up a lot).

PREREQUISITE/PRE-CALCULUS REVIEW 3 (7) Basics of polynomials: What a root or zero is, the Quadratic Equation (for finding the roots/zeros of y = ax 2 + bx + c): b ± b 2 4ac 2a what we mean by degree, how the degree and leading coefficient effect end behavior. (8) How to plot quadratics (such as those in Figure 2) by factoring or completing the square. (a) Factoring: y = x 2 + x + 2 y = (x 2 x 2) y = (x + )(x 2), so we have a parabola opening downward with x-intercepts at and 2. (b) Completing the Square: y = x 2 + 2x + 3 2 y = (x2 + 2x + ) + 3 2 y = (x+)2 +, so we have 2 the graph of y = x 2 shifted left one unit and up 2 -unit. Figure 2. Two Examples of Graphing Quadratics (9) What a rational function is, and how to find its domain..3 - New Functions from Known Functions You need to know about the various shifts and transformations (shrinking and stretching won t come up very much in this class, so focus on the others): () Shifting: Given a function y = f(x) and a constant c > 0, we have the following: y = f(x) + c shifts the graph up c units (add c to y-values). y = f(x) c shifts the graph down c units (subtract c from y-values). y = f(x + c) shifts the graph left c units (subtract c from x-values, i.e., replace x with x + c). y = f(x c) shifts the graph right c units (add c to x-values, i.e., replace x with x c). (2) Reflecting: y = f(x) reflects graph about the x-axis (multiply all y values by, i.e., multiply function by ). y = f( x) reflects graph about the y-axis (multiply all x values by, i.e., replace x with x). (3) Stretching & Shrinking: Given a function y = f(x) and a constant c > :

4 PREREQUISITE/PRE-CALCULUS REVIEW y = c f(x) gives a vertical stretch by a factor of c (multiply y-values by c, i.e., multiply function by c). y = c f(x) gives a vertical shrink by a factor of c (divide y-values by c, i.e., divide function by c). y = f(c x) gives a horizontal shrink by a factor of c (divide x-values by c, i.e., replace x with c x in the function). y = f( c x) gives a horizontal stretch by a factor of c (multiply x-values by c, i.e., replace x with x in the function). c.5 &.6 - Exponential Functions and Logarithms Exponential Functions and Laws of Exponents. An exponential function with base a is of the form f(x) = a x, a > 0 (and typically a ) If s, t, a, b are real numbers with a > 0 and b > 0, then s = a 0 = a s a t = a s+t (a s ) t = a st = (a t ) s (ab) s = a s b s ( a b ) s = a s b s a s = a s = ( ) s a The following property is one of the ways we can solve exponential equations or inequalities (you are expected to know how to do this), either by getting a single exponential on each side with the same base and then setting exponents equal, or by taking a number raised to both sides: a u = a v u = v Graphs of Exponential Functions. We can take f(x) = a x and reflect it about the x- or y-axis. For a >, we get the graphs in Figure 3 (graphs for 0 < a < can be obtained by taking the reciprocal of the base and multiplying the exponent by, e.g., y = ( 2) x is the same as y = 2 x ). Logarithmic Functions and Laws of Logarithms. A logarithmic function looks like: (Note: y = log a (x) x = a y.) f(x) = log a (x), where a > 0, a When the base of a log function is e, we write ln(x) instead of log e (x) (y = ln(x) x = e y ). When the base of a log function is 0, we write log(x) instead of log 0 (x) (y = log(x) x = 0 y ).

PREREQUISITE/PRE-CALCULUS REVIEW 5 (a) f(x) = a x. range is (0, ), (, a ), (0, ), (, a) (b) f(x) = a x. range is (0, ), points ( marked ) are, a, (0, ), (, a) (c) f(x) = a x. range is (0, ), (, a), (0, ), (, ) a (d) f(x) = a x. range is (0, ), (, a), (0, ), (, ) a Figure 3. Graphs of Exponential Functions (Other shifts/transformations may also be applied.) The following are properties of logarithmic functions (these hold for any base, including e): log a () = 0 log a (a) = a log a (M) = M log a (a r ) = r log a (MN) = log a (M) + log a (N) ( M ) log a = log N a (M) log a (N) log a (M r ) = r log a (M) log a (x) = ln(x) ln(a) = log(x) log(a) (this is known as the Change of Base Formula) The following property give us a couple of the ways we can solve logarithmic equations or inequalities (you are expected to know how to do this), either by getting a single log with the same base on each side and then setting the arguments equal, or by taking the log of both sides (using an appropriate base): log a (M) = log a (N) M = N Graphs of Logarithmic Functions. We can take f(x) = log a (x) and reflect it about the x- or y-axis. For a >, we get the graphs in Figure 4 (graphs for 0 < a < can be obtained by taking the reciprocal of the base and then multiplying by, e.g., y = log 2 (x) is the same as y = log 2(x)). What you need to know from this section: Appendix C - Trigonometry () Converting from radians to degrees (probably won t use this much): π rad = 80, so rad = 80 π and = π 80 rad

6 PREREQUISITE/PRE-CALCULUS REVIEW (a) f(x) = log a (x). Domain is (0, ), range is R, points ( marked are a, ), (, 0), (a, ) (b) f(x) = log a (x). Domain is (0, ), range is R, ( a, ), (, 0), (a, ) (c) f(x) = log a ( x). Domain is (, 0), range is R, ( a, ), (, 0), ( a, ) (d) f(x) = log a ( x). Domain is (, 0), range is R, ( a, ), (, 0), ( a, ) Figure 4. Graphs of Logarithmic Functions (Other shifts/transformations may also be applied.) (2) The basic definitions of trigonometric functions in terms of the sides of a right triangle: sin(θ) = opp hyp csc(θ) = hyp opp cos(θ) = adj hyp sec(θ) = hyp adj tan(θ) = opp adj cot(θ) = adj opp (3) The notation for the inverse trigonometric functions (and what these functions are): arcsin(θ) or sin (θ), arccos(θ) or cos (θ), arctan(θ) or tan (θ) Remember that this the is inverse notation, not exponential notation, i.e., sin (θ) sin(θ), cos (θ) cos(θ), and tan (θ) tan(θ) (4) How to find the values of all trigonometric functions at common angles using either the unit circle (see Figure 5), or by using a 30 60 90 or 45 45 90 triangle (drawn the in the appropriate quadrant). (5) How to find common values for arctan(x) (similar to previous item). (6) The graphs of the four trig functions shown in Figure 6: (7) The Reciprocal and Quotient Identities: csc(θ) = sin(θ), sec(θ) = cos(θ), cot(θ) = tan(θ), (8) The Pythagorean Identities: sin(θ) tan(θ) = cos(θ), cos(θ) cot(θ) = sin(θ) = sin 2 (θ) + cos 2 (θ), csc 2 (θ) = + cot 2 (θ), sec 2 (θ) = tan 2 (θ) + (9) That sine is an odd function and that cosine is an even function, i.e., that sin( θ) = sin(θ) and cos( θ) = cos(θ)

PREREQUISITE/PRE-CALCULUS REVIEW 7 Figure 5. The Unit Circle (image courtesy FCIT, http://etc.usf.edu/clipart) (a) f(x) = sin(x) range is [, ]. (b) f(x) = cos(x) range is [, ]. (c) f(x) = tan(x) Domain { is } x R x (2n+)π, 2 range is (, ). (d) f(x) = arctan(x) range is [ π 2, π 2 ]. Figure 6. Graphs of Trigonometric Functions You Should Know (0) The Half-Angle Formulas: cos 2 (x) = 2 sin 2 (x) = 2 + cos(2x) ( + cos(2x)) = 2 cos(2x) ( cos(2x)) = 2

8 PREREQUISITE/PRE-CALCULUS REVIEW () These facts about sine and cosine: and so sin(x) and cos(x) sin(x) and cos(x).6 - Inverse Functions What you need to know from this section: () What it means for a function to be - (read one-to-one ). (2) The Horizontal Line Test. (3) The notation for compositions of functions [(f g)(x) = f (g(x))]. (4) How to find the inverse of a given function (here are the steps): (a) Check to that the function is (at least on the domain given). If it s not, then either the domain has to be restricted (usually told in the problem that this is the case) or you can t find the inverse. (b) Interchange the xs and ys, i.e., instead of y = f(x) now write x = f(y). (c) Solve for y. The result will be f (x). (5) How the domain and range of f and f relate to each other. (6) What happens when you compose a function with its inverse. (7) That the graphs of f and f are symmetric about the line y = x.