horizontial axis
the independent variable goes on the x-axis the dependent goes on the y-axis
Graph
there is no graph
Deadweight loss on a graph can be identified as the area of the triangle between the supply and demand curves, and the new equilibrium point after a tax or regulation is imposed. To quantify it, you can calculate the area of this triangle using the formula: 0.5 x base x height. This represents the loss of economic efficiency due to market distortion.
Unfortunately the graph does not show.. But, i can tell you that business cycle is divided into: 1) introduction - start of the graph 2) growth - graph goes up 3) maturity - graph is static and slowly pointing doen 4)decline - graph starts to go down.. if your graph is this way, then the answer is yes..
Acceleration is indicated on a speed/time graph.
On a graph, a speed of zero would be represented by a horizontal line at the zero point on the y-axis, indicating no change in position over time. This would appear as a flat line running parallel to the x-axis.
I am assuming the you are talking about the graph of the derivative. The graph of the derivative of F(x) is the graph such that, for any x, the value of x on the graph of the derivative of F(x) is the slope at point x in F(x).
To translate the graph y = x to the graph of y = x - 6, shift the graph of y = x down 6 units.
graph x+4<5
no
a line graph
The x-axis is the horizontal line on an x and y graph.
If an x-t graph is a position-time graph, velocity is the slope of the line on the graph.
No. And for examples where they don't look at graphs where the x-axis is years. If the scales do not start at zero, this fact should be clearly indicated.
The graph of g(x) is the graph of f(x) shifted 6 units in the direction of positive x.
The x-axis of a graph is always your independent variable and the y-axis is the dependent variable. The independent variable is so called because it can stand alone as data and does not depend on other information to make sense.