It is the gradient of the line. Pick any two points on the line. Measure the RISE = difference in their heights (distances from the x-axis), and the RUN = difference in their horizontal displacements (distances from the y-axis). The unit rate is RISE/RUN.
It's a slanted straight line that goes through the origin of the coordinates.
goes through the origin, up and to the right
It is in quadrants 1 and 2 It is v shaped it goes through the origin hope this helps!
We don't have your graph so can't answer your question.
The formula direct variation is xk=y, where k is the constant of variation.Direct variation functions always pass through the origin. Direct variation functions are linear functions (goes in a straight line), except that they pass through the origin. Regular linear functions don't pass through the origin. That is the only difference.
It makes a line ,it goes through the origin, it has a constant
It is the gradient of the straight line joining the origin to any point on the graph. Thus, if A = (p,q) is any point on the graph, the average unit rate between the origin and A is q/p (provided p is non-zero).
It may or may not exist. Whether or not the graph goes through the origin does not in any way affect whether or not it has a derivative. A function has a derivative if it has no discontinuities, cusps, sharp corners, or vertical tangents.
Divide the ordinate (y-coord) of any point on the graph by its abscissa (x-coord).
no
It's a slanted straight line that goes through the origin of the coordinates.
goes through the origin, up and to the right
the slope is 1, and goes through the origin. It's a straight, diagonal line.
To find a unit rate on a graph that goes through the origin, identify the coordinates of a point on the line (other than the origin). The unit rate is determined by calculating the slope of the line, which is the change in the y-value divided by the change in the x-value (rise over run). Since the line passes through the origin, the slope directly represents the unit rate of change between the two quantities. For example, if the point is (4, 8), the unit rate would be 8/4 = 2, indicating that for every 1 unit increase in x, y increases by 2 units.
-- Take the equation -- Set either 'x' or 'y' equal to zero -- Solve the resulting equation for the remaining variable -- If the remaining variable is then also zero, then the origin is on the graph of the function If the graph is a straight line ('x' and 'y' appear in the equation only to the 1st power), then the equation has to be in the form of a simple ratio ... like (y = Kx) or (x = Ky) or (xy = K) or (x/y = K) ... in order to go through the origin.
No, in general, the force vs acceleration graph does not always pass through the origin. This is because there may be a non-zero force acting on an object even when it is at rest. The presence of a non-zero force at rest would lead to a non-zero intercept on the force vs acceleration graph.
It is in quadrants 1 and 2 It is v shaped it goes through the origin hope this helps!