Questions tagged [graphing-functions]

For questions regarding the plotting or graphing of functions. For questions about the kinds of graphs with vertices and edges, use the (graph-theory) tag instead.

Given a real-valued function $f\colon \mathbf{R} \to \mathbf{R}$, the graph of $f$ is the set of all input-output pairs $(x,f(x))$ regarded as a set of points in the plane $\mathbf{R} \times \mathbf{R}$. Considering the graph of a function gives us a geometric perspective on the data that the function represents.

  • If the function $f$ is continuous, the graph of $f$ "looks continuous." That is, there are no gaps, and the graph is a connected curve.

  • If the function $f$ is differentiable, then it will contain no "sharp corners."

  • If we're thinking of the domain of the function as representing time, the the graph gives us a nice visualization of the change in outputs of the function over time.

A graph can be defined much more generally though. Let $\mathbf{k}$ be a local field, and suppose $f$ is a vector-valued function $f\colon \mathbf{k}^n \to \mathbf{k}^m$ where $f(x_1, \dotsc, x_n) = (y_1, \dotsc, y_m)$ and each coordinate $y_i$ of the output is a function of the $x_1, \dotsc, x_n$. In this setting, the graph of $f$ is the set of points

$$(x_1, \dotsc, x_n, y_1, \dotsc, y_m) \subset \mathbf{k}^{n+m}\,.$$

This general construction of the graph of a function can be useful in the study of algebraic geometry or the study of manifolds.

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Is this Batman equation for real?

HardOCP has an image with an equation which apparently draws the Batman logo. Is this for real? Batman Equation in text form: \begin{align} &\left(\left(\frac x7\right)^2\sqrt{\frac{||x|-3|}{|x|-3}}+\left(\frac…
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Why do bell curves appear everywhere?

Why do most probability graphs show a bell curve? I've been wondering why... Is it just something natural, like the fibonacci sequence?
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Equation of a "tilted" sine

I would like to know what's the equation of a "tilted" sine, that looks like this (no idea how to show it better). I remember first seeing this waveform in some kind of sound synthesizer, where one of the knobs for controlling shape of the sine…
Lugi
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To which degree must I rotate a parabola for it to be no longer the graph of a function?

To which degree must I rotate a parabola for it to be no longer the graph of a function? I have no problem with narrowing the question down by only concerning the standard parabola: $$f(x)=x^2.$$ I am looking for a specific angle measure. One such…
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Regarding a Coin Toss Experiment by Neil DeGrasse Tyson, and its validity

In one of his interviews, Clip Link, Neil DeGrasse Tyson discusses a coin toss experiment. It goes something like this: Line up 1000 people, each given a coin, to be flipped simultaneously Ask each one to flip if heads the person can continue If…
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How can a "proper" function have a vertical slope?

Plotting the function $f(x)=x^{1/3}$ defined for any real number $x$ gives us: Since $f$ is a function, for any given $x$ value it maps to a single y value (and not more than one $y$ value, because that would mean it's not a function as it fails…
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Dog bone-shaped curve: $|x|^x=|y|^y$

EDITED: Some of the questions are ansered, some aren't. EDITED: In order not to make this post too long, I posted another post which consists of more questions. Let $f$ be (almost) the implicit curve$$|x|^x=|y|^y$$ See the graph of the…
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Why does the graph of $e^{1/z}$ look like a dipole?

I was looking at the color wheel graph of $e^{1/z}$, and my girlfriend commented that it looked just like a dipole. Does anyone have an explanation for that, why the geometry would be so similar? I guess as we follow e.g. the red color from the left…
Eric Auld
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Is there a way to rotate the graph of a function?

Assuming I have the graph of a function $f(x)$ is there function $f_1(f(x))$ that will give me a rotated version of the graph of that function? For example if I plot $\sin(x)$ I will get a sine wave which straddles the $x$-axis, can I apply a…
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Is "imposing" one function onto another ever used in mathematics?

First of all, let me define what I mean by "imposing," and let me clarify that I've only studied this operation in 2D Euclidean space. Now then, to impose one function onto another, you need two things: A function upon which to impose, called the…
Steven
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Is there any mathematical way to describe what happens to a function when the graph is zoomed out infinitely far?

For example, if you zoom out very far on a graph of the function $y = x^3$, it appears like $x = 0$, or in general, if you zoom out on the graph $x^n$ for $n > 0$ it appears either like $x = 0$ with the restriction that for even bases $y \ge…
MilesZew
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Cannabis Equation

How can an equation for the following curve be derived? $$r=(1+0.9 \cos(8 \theta)) (1+0.1 \cos(24 \theta)) (0.9+0.1 \cos(200 \theta)) (1+\sin(\theta))$$ (From WolframAlpha)
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Plot of a ... Square?

Well there are equations which can plot a square like : $|x-y|+|x+y|=a$ But how about this equation: ? (At the end ... bear with me!) [Here I have taken $a = 1$] Plot of $$x^2 + y^2 = a^2$$ Plot of $$x^4 + y^4 = a^4$$ Plot of $$x^6 + y^6 =…
NeilRoy
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Do $3/8$ (37.5%) of Quadratics Have No $x$-Intercepts?

I randomly had a thought about what proportion of quadratics don't have real $x$-intercepts. Initially I thought 33%, because 0,1,2 intercepts, then I thought that the proportion of 1 intercepts is infinitesimal. So I then thought 50%, as…
Simplex1
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How to verify if a curve is exponential by eyeballing?

A plane curve is printed on a piece of paper with the directions of both axes specified. How can I (roughly) verify if the curve is of the form $y=a e^{bx}+c$ without fitting or doing any quantitative calculation? For example, for linear curves, I…
arax
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