No, a circle graph is never a function.
sine graph will be formed at origine of graph and cosine graph is find on y-axise
A line. The derivative of a function is its slope. If the slope is a constant then the graph is a line.
A derivative graph tracks the slope of a function.
If the graph is a function, no line perpendicular to the X-axis can intersect the graph at more than one point.
A formula or graph are two ways to describe a math function. How a math function is described depends on the domain of the function or the complexity of the function.
The straight line in the graph goes 'uphill' from left to right
You cannot.
A constant function is just a horizontal line. To graph the function y=5 or f(x)=5, just draw a horizontal line at y=5 and x=0. | | |-------------------- y=5 | | ---------------------
No, a circle graph is never a function.
A zero of a function is a point at which the value of the function is zero. If you graph the function, it is a point at which the graph touches the x-axis.
True
sine graph will be formed at origine of graph and cosine graph is find on y-axise
Yes the graph of a function can be a vertical or a horizontal line
Yes the graph of a function can be a vertical or a horizontal line
If the graph of the function is a continuous line then the function is differentiable. Also if the graph suddenly make a deviation at any point then the function is not differentiable at that point . The slope of a tangent at any point of the graph gives the derivative of the function at that point.
A graph is a representation of a thing/system, and can be used to test a hypothesis. For example, if you have a graph of a trend you can find the function of that trend. Then, you can plug in values the graph defines--say, at 2 the graph reaches 5--and if the function works, you know you have modeled the phenomenon correctly. This function testing can work to test a hypothesis, especially in finding trends.