Small question

maxhk

New member
Joined
Sep 26, 2011
Messages
26
Hello everyone,

I have this small question :

"If \(\displaystyle a, b, c\) are constants with \(\displaystyle ab \neq 0\), show that the graph of \(\displaystyle y = a \ \sin(bx+c)\) is always concave toward the x-axis."

What does concave toward the x-axis mean ? I don't understand what am I supposed to do ?

I understand what concave upward and concave downward are.

Thanks for your help!
 
Last edited:
Hello, maxhk!

What does concave toward the x-axis mean?

When the graph is above the \(\displaystyle x\)-axis, it is concave down.

When the graph is below the \(\displaystyle x\)-axis, it is concave up.


Code:
    |
    |        *
    |     *     *
    |   *         *
    |  *           *
    |
- - + * - - - - - - * - - - - - - * - -
    |
    |                *           *
    |                 *         *
    |                   *     *
    |                      *
    |

The "concave side" of the graph is always toward the \(\displaystyle x\)-axis.
 
Top