No. If it cuts a graph it is not an asymptote.
It has no asymptote. 3x is a straight line and therefore is a tangent to itself.
It will have the same asymptote. One can derive a vertical asymptote from the denominator of a function. There is an asymptote at a value of x where the denominator equals 0. Therefore the 3 would go in the numerator when distributed and would have no effect as to where the vertical asymptote lies. So that would be true.
I don't know, what?
2
A circle does not have an asymptote.
Asymptote Architecture was created in 1989.
No. If it cuts a graph it is not an asymptote.
No if the denominators cancel each other out there is no asymptote
An asymptote is a line or curve that approaches a given curve arbitrarily closely.
It has no asymptote. 3x is a straight line and therefore is a tangent to itself.
It will have the same asymptote. One can derive a vertical asymptote from the denominator of a function. There is an asymptote at a value of x where the denominator equals 0. Therefore the 3 would go in the numerator when distributed and would have no effect as to where the vertical asymptote lies. So that would be true.
Asymptote - vector graphics language - was created in 2004.
I don't know, what?
2
Yes, the asymptote is x = 0. In order for logarithmic equation to have an asymptote, the value inside log must be 0. Then, 5x = 0 → x = 0.
Considering an asymptote as a tangent to the curve "at infinity", the asymptote is the straight line itself.