A cubic.
A cubic line is in a cube shape line. and Parabola is a straight line
false
The cubic function is the name of graph that is steeper on the way up than on the way down. An absolute value function is a grpah that is shaped a bit like a y=x2 parabola.
We can draw 3 normals to a parabola from a given point as the equation of normal in parametric form is a cubic equation.
You can write any radical as a power. For example, taking the square root is the same as raising to the power 1/2; taking the cubic root is the same as raising to the power 1/3. Here is an example how you can use this knowledge, to take the cubic root of 125 (which of course is 5) in Excel:= 125^(1/3)
They are both polynomial functions. A quadratic is of order 2 while a cubic is of order 3. A cubic MUST have a real root, a quadratic need not.
No. Parabola and the cubic graph are definitely two different things.
A cubic line is in a cube shape line. and Parabola is a straight line
false
The cubic function is the name of graph that is steeper on the way up than on the way down. An absolute value function is a grpah that is shaped a bit like a y=x2 parabola.
cubic function cubic function
We can draw 3 normals to a parabola from a given point as the equation of normal in parametric form is a cubic equation.
No. A quadratic polynomial is degree 2 (2 is the highest power); a cubic polynomial is degree 3 (3 is the highest power).No. A quadratic polynomial is degree 2 (2 is the highest power); a cubic polynomial is degree 3 (3 is the highest power).No. A quadratic polynomial is degree 2 (2 is the highest power); a cubic polynomial is degree 3 (3 is the highest power).No. A quadratic polynomial is degree 2 (2 is the highest power); a cubic polynomial is degree 3 (3 is the highest power).
The inverse of the cubic function is the cube root function.
A cubic function is a smooth function (differentiable everywhere). It has no vertices anywhere.
You can write any radical as a power. For example, taking the square root is the same as raising to the power 1/2; taking the cubic root is the same as raising to the power 1/3. Here is an example how you can use this knowledge, to take the cubic root of 125 (which of course is 5) in Excel:= 125^(1/3)
It will be a cubic polynomial.