It is likely that a horizontal line on a graph will have the equation y=c, where c is a variable.
The graph of the equation y=8 is a horizontal line through the y-intercept of 8. This is because since y=8, any point on the graph will have a y-coordinate of 8. This is why it is a horizontal line through (0,8).
Higuchi equation and a type of graph. There are many ways to write out this type of graph.
For the equation (9x^2)/(x^2+4)
It is a horizontal line in the Cartesian plane, or a vertical line in the complex plane. The reason is that these points satisfy the equation while no others do.
its not the equation that matters it is how you map it out on the graph, the vertical and horizontal axis are interchangeable. For example if x is the vertical axis and y is the horizontal axis the graph would look different than if y was the vertical axis and x was the horizontal axis. The narrow and wide of a graph depend on the horizontal axis ( how quickly the numbers increase and or how far apart the markers are spaced) ...If the intervals are counted by 5 the graph would be wider than if the intervals were counted by 500.
The coefficient of x is 0 in the equation of line (The x term is missing).Equation of a horizontal line is of the type y=constant.For eg: y=3, y=-1 etc.
y=mx+b
Higuchi equation and a type of graph. There are many ways to write out this type of graph.
The graph of the equation y=8 is a horizontal line through the y-intercept of 8. This is because since y=8, any point on the graph will have a y-coordinate of 8. This is why it is a horizontal line through (0,8).
They will be on the horizontal x axis of the graph (look for the x-intercepts).
For the equation (9x^2)/(x^2+4)
It is a horizontal line in the Cartesian plane, or a vertical line in the complex plane. The reason is that these points satisfy the equation while no others do.
its not the equation that matters it is how you map it out on the graph, the vertical and horizontal axis are interchangeable. For example if x is the vertical axis and y is the horizontal axis the graph would look different than if y was the vertical axis and x was the horizontal axis. The narrow and wide of a graph depend on the horizontal axis ( how quickly the numbers increase and or how far apart the markers are spaced) ...If the intervals are counted by 5 the graph would be wider than if the intervals were counted by 500.
No. If you graph it, it doesn't. No line is horizontal unless the equation is y=A, where A is any real number.
If there is no slope in a graph, it means that the line is horizontal. A horizontal line has a slope of zero. To graph a horizontal line, you simply draw a straight line that is parallel to the x-axis. The equation of a horizontal line is typically in the form y = k, where k is a constant value.
For a start, you would need an initial equation. A horizontal translation of ANY equation can be achieved by replacing every ocurrence of "x" with "x - a", where "a" is the amount you want to move the graph to the right. For example, replacing every ocurrence of "x" by "x - 10" will move your graph 10 units to the right.
You find the equation of a graph by finding an equation with a graph.