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It depends on what the coordinates of the first three vertices are!
The vertex is at the origin of coordinates ... the point (0, 0).
It is the height of the perpendicular line from its vertex to its base
Because they represent a pair of coordinates
In 3 dimensional space, there are 12 coordinates, although 9 will be enough to determine the rest..
i think that the range and the domain of a parabola is the coordinates of the vertex
It depends on what the coordinates of the first three vertices are!
The vertex is at the origin of coordinates ... the point (0, 0).
The coordinates will be at the point of the turn the parabola which is its vertex.
We will be able to identify the answer if we have the equation. We can only check on the coordinates from the given vertex.
The vertex is at (5, -5).
It is (-1, 3).
2
The vertex is (5, 11).
guess where it would go... shouldnt be cheating on your study island:)
Use this form: y= a(x-h)² + k ; plug in the x and y coordinates of the vertex into (h,k) and then the other point coordinates into (x,y) and solve for a.
The graph of a quadratic function is always a parabola. If you put the equation (or function) into vertex form, you can read off the coordinates of the vertex, and you know the shape and orientation (up/down) of the parabola.