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GRAPHING VERTICAL TRANSLATIONS OF PARABOLAS. Recall: Vertical Translations  When you add a constant to the end of the equation for a parabola, you translate.

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Presentation on theme: "GRAPHING VERTICAL TRANSLATIONS OF PARABOLAS. Recall: Vertical Translations  When you add a constant to the end of the equation for a parabola, you translate."— Presentation transcript:

1 GRAPHING VERTICAL TRANSLATIONS OF PARABOLAS

2 Recall: Vertical Translations  When you add a constant to the end of the equation for a parabola, you translate it vertically.  If the constant is positive, the parabola is translated up (positively). If the constant is negative, the parabola is translated down (negatively).

3 Graphing Vertical Translations  What if you have the graph of a parabola, and you want to translate that graph vertically? How do you graph the new parabola?  Just move every point on the parabola the same distance vertically.

4 Example Here’s an example of a parabola that has been vertically translated. Each point on the new parabola is 5 higher than its corresponding point on the old one.

5 The Process 1. Figure out how far the parabola is translated 2. Graph the original parabola 3. Graph the translated parabola by translating each point.

6 Example Part 1  Say we want to graph y = x 2 – 3.  The first step is to figure out how much it’s translated from the basic parabola y = x 2.  Since we subtract three, the parabola is translated 3 units down.

7 Example Part 2 First, we’re going to graph the original parabola.

8 Example Part 3 Now we’ll graph the new parabola by moving each point 3 units down. We have our new graph!


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