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What do you notice? What do you wonder?
Set 1:
Set 2:
Here are two sets of equations for quadratic functions that you saw earlier. In each set, the expressions that define the output are equivalent.
Set 1:
Set 2:
The expressions that define and are written in vertex form.
We can show that is equivalent to the expression defining by expanding the expression:
Show that the expressions defining and are equivalent.
Graph of
Graph of
Graph . Then, experiment with each of the following changes to the function, and see how they affect the graph and the vertex:
| equations | coordinates of vertex | graph opens upward or downward? |
|---|---|---|
Sometimes the expressions that define quadratic functions are written in vertex form. The function is in vertex form and is shown in this graph.
The vertex form can tell us about the coordinates of the vertex of the graph of a quadratic function. The expression reveals that the -coordinate of the vertex is 3, and the constant term, 4, reveals that the -coordinate of the vertex is 4. Here the vertex represents the minimum value of function , and its graph opens upward.
In general, a quadratic function expressed in vertex form is written as . The vertex of its graph is at . The graph of the quadratic function opens upward when the coefficient, , is positive and opens downward when is negative.
The vertex form of a quadratic expression is , where , , and are constants and . The vertex of the graph is at the point .