Thomas' Calculus 13th Edition

Published by Pearson
ISBN 10: 0-32187-896-5
ISBN 13: 978-0-32187-896-0

Chapter 1: Functions - Section 1.2 - Combining Functions; Shifting and Scaling Graphs - Exercises 1.2 - Page 19: 17

Answer

a. $ f(g(x))=\sqrt {\frac{1}{x}+1}$ b. Domain: $(-\infty,-1] \cup (0,\infty)$, c. Range: $[0,1) \cup (1,\infty)$ a. $ g(f(x))=\frac{1}{\sqrt {x+1}}$ b. Domain: $(-1,\infty)$, c. Range: $(0,\infty)$

Work Step by Step

a. To calculate the composite function, we place the inside function into the "x" value of the outside function. Thus: $$f\circ g=f(g(x))=\sqrt {\frac{1}{x}+1}$$ For $f\circ g$ to be defined in $\mathbb{R}$, the denominator of $\frac{1}{x}$ cannot be zero$$x \ne 0$$ and the expression $\frac{1}{x} + 1$ under the root cannot be negative $$\frac{1}{x} + 1 \geq 0$$ For $x \gt 0$ the inequality becomes $x \geq -1$ and the intersection of $x \gt 0$ with $x \geq -1$ gives us $x \gt 0$ For $x \lt 0$ the inequality becomes $x \leq -1$ and the intersection of $x \lt 0$ with $x \leq -1$ gives us $x \leq -1$ Therefore, the domain of $f \circ g$ is the union of $x \leq -1$ and $x \gt 0$ which can be written as $(-\infty,-1] \cup (0,\infty)$ The range should resemble the range of the square root function in $\mathbb{R}$ which is $(0, \infty)$. However, because $\frac{1}{x}$ can't be zero, the expression $\frac{1}{x} + 1$ under the root can also never equal exactly $1$. We have to exclude $\sqrt 1$ or just $1$ from the range. Therefore, the range of $f \circ g$ is $[0,1) \cup (1,\infty)$ b. We compose the function as we did above, by replacing x in the outer function with the inner function: $$g\circ f=g(f(x))=\frac{1}{\sqrt {x+1}}$$ The value under the root cannot be negative. And in this case because the root is the denominator of a fraction, it also cannot be zero. Therefore, $x + 1 \gt 0$ or $x \gt -1$ The domain of $g \circ f$ is $(-1,\infty)$ The range should resemble the range of the $\frac{1}{x}$ function which is $(-\infty,0) \cup (0, \infty)$ however because $\sqrt {x + 1}$ is always positive, the resulting fraction can never be negative. The range of $g \circ f$ is $(0,\infty)$
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