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Quadratic Functions… and their applicati ons!
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Quadratic Functions… and their applications! For a typical basketball shot, the ball’s height (in feet) will be a function of time in flight (in seconds),

Dec 14, 2015

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Page 1: Quadratic Functions… and their applications! For a typical basketball shot, the ball’s height (in feet) will be a function of time in flight (in seconds),

Quadratic Functions…

and their applications!

Page 2: Quadratic Functions… and their applications! For a typical basketball shot, the ball’s height (in feet) will be a function of time in flight (in seconds),

For a typical basketball shot, the ball’s height (in feet) will be a function of time in flight (in seconds), modeled by an equation such as h = -16t2 +40 t +6.

a) What is the maximum height of the ball?

b) When will the shot reach the height of the basket? (10 feet)

c) When will the ball hit the floor, if it missed the basket entirely?

Page 3: Quadratic Functions… and their applications! For a typical basketball shot, the ball’s height (in feet) will be a function of time in flight (in seconds),

a) What is the maximum height of the ball?

Put it in your calculator!

Answer: The maximum height of the ball is 31 feet!

Use your zooms and change your window until you see the maximum.

Find the maximum!

Page 4: Quadratic Functions… and their applications! For a typical basketball shot, the ball’s height (in feet) will be a function of time in flight (in seconds),

b) When will the shot reach the height of the basket? (10 feet)

Key words to highlight:

Put 10 in for y2 and find the…

INTERSECTION!

Answer: 2.4 seconds!

When (so we are looking for our x)Height of the basket (10 feet)

Page 5: Quadratic Functions… and their applications! For a typical basketball shot, the ball’s height (in feet) will be a function of time in flight (in seconds),

c) When will the ball hit the floor, if it missed the basket entirely?

What do we put in for y2?

y2 = 0 Now find the intersection!

Answer: The ball will hit the floor after 2.64 seconds!

Page 6: Quadratic Functions… and their applications! For a typical basketball shot, the ball’s height (in feet) will be a function of time in flight (in seconds),

YOU DO:

The height, H metres, of a rocket t seconds after it is fired vertically upwards is given by How long does it take for the rocket to reach

its maximum height? What is the maximum height reached by the

rocket? How long does it take for the rocket to fall

back to earth?

0,5080)( 2 ttttH

Page 7: Quadratic Functions… and their applications! For a typical basketball shot, the ball’s height (in feet) will be a function of time in flight (in seconds),

Mrs. Holst (who loves to swim!) is putting in a swimming pool next to her house. She wants to put a nice, rectangular privacy fence around it, but she can only afford to pay for 50 feet of fencing. If she does not need a fence on the part adjacent to her house, what are the dimensions of the fence with the largest area she could have for her pool?

Page 8: Quadratic Functions… and their applications! For a typical basketball shot, the ball’s height (in feet) will be a function of time in flight (in seconds),

My house!

My pool will go here! My future

fence!

Help me get the most space for my money!

x ft.

x ft. y ft.

2x + y = 50

y = 50 - 2x

Area = x y50 – 2x

A = x(50 – 2x)

A = 50x – 2x2

Now graph it!

Page 9: Quadratic Functions… and their applications! For a typical basketball shot, the ball’s height (in feet) will be a function of time in flight (in seconds),

Maximum Area

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

0 10 20 30

Length

Area

Put it in your calculator and

find the what??? MAXIMUM

Do we need the x value or the y

value?

x value!x = 12.5 ft.

thus y = 50 – 2(12.5)

y = 25Dimensions of the

Fence:25 ft x 12.5 ft

Page 10: Quadratic Functions… and their applications! For a typical basketball shot, the ball’s height (in feet) will be a function of time in flight (in seconds),

A farmer wants to build two rectangular pens of the same size next to a river so they are separated by one fence. If she has 240 meters of fencing and does not fence the side next to the river, what are the dimensions of the largest area enclosed? What is the largest area?

Page 11: Quadratic Functions… and their applications! For a typical basketball shot, the ball’s height (in feet) will be a function of time in flight (in seconds),

Step 1: Draw a figure!

x m x m x m

y m

Page 12: Quadratic Functions… and their applications! For a typical basketball shot, the ball’s height (in feet) will be a function of time in flight (in seconds),

Step 2: Set up your equations!

3x + y = 240

A = xy

y = 240 – 3x

Perimeter equation

Area equation

Solve for y!

Substitute y into the area equation A = x(240 – 3x)

A = 240x – 3x2Distribute the x.

Now what type of function do we have????

So graph it!

Page 13: Quadratic Functions… and their applications! For a typical basketball shot, the ball’s height (in feet) will be a function of time in flight (in seconds),

Step 3: Graph it!

Remember: There are two questions in the problem.

1. What are the dimensions of the largest area enclosed?

2. What is the largest area?

So when we graph and find the maximum, are we looking for the x or y for number 1?

So when we graph and find the maximum, are we looking for the x or y for number 2?

x!

y!

Page 14: Quadratic Functions… and their applications! For a typical basketball shot, the ball’s height (in feet) will be a function of time in flight (in seconds),

The Chesapeake Bay

Page 15: Quadratic Functions… and their applications! For a typical basketball shot, the ball’s height (in feet) will be a function of time in flight (in seconds),
Page 16: Quadratic Functions… and their applications! For a typical basketball shot, the ball’s height (in feet) will be a function of time in flight (in seconds),

Average Monthly Temperatures of the Chesapeake Bay

Month

Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec

Temp 31 34 44 54 64 72 76 75 68 57 47 36

1. Turn on your STAT PLOT and Diagnostics (2nd 0 x-1)

2. Enter your data in L1 and L2

3. Look at the data you have entered. What is the temperature doing? Now let’s actually look at the STAT PLOT (Zoom 9).4. Which function that we’ve studied would best model the data?

Do a quadratic regression!STAT CALC 5

Page 17: Quadratic Functions… and their applications! For a typical basketball shot, the ball’s height (in feet) will be a function of time in flight (in seconds),

What is the r2 value?

r2 = .927 This tells us that 92.7% of the time, the model is a good predictor, and the closer this value is to 1, the closer the data is to the model.

Page 18: Quadratic Functions… and their applications! For a typical basketball shot, the ball’s height (in feet) will be a function of time in flight (in seconds),

Analysis According to the model, what month does

the maximum temperature occur?

According to the model, during what months would the temperature be 50°?

June!

March and October

Page 19: Quadratic Functions… and their applications! For a typical basketball shot, the ball’s height (in feet) will be a function of time in flight (in seconds),

Darryl is standing on top of the bleachers and throws a football across

the field. The data that follows gives the height of the ball in feet versus the seconds since the ball was thrown.

Time 0.2 0.6 1 1.2 1.5 2 2.5 2.8 3.4 3.8 4.5Ht. 92 110 130 134 142 144 140 132 112 90 44

a. Show a scatter plot of the data. What is the independent variable, and what is the dependent variable?

b. What prediction equation (mathematical model) describes this data?

c. When will the ball be at a height of 150 feet?

d. When will the ball be at a height of 100 feet?

e. At what times will the ball be at a height greater than 100 feet?

f. When will the ball be at a height of 40 feet?

g. When will the ball hit the ground?

Page 20: Quadratic Functions… and their applications! For a typical basketball shot, the ball’s height (in feet) will be a function of time in flight (in seconds),

a. Show a scatter plot of the data. What is the independent variable, and what is the

dependent variable?

Independent variable (x): Time! (always!)

Dependent variable (y): Height

Page 21: Quadratic Functions… and their applications! For a typical basketball shot, the ball’s height (in feet) will be a function of time in flight (in seconds),

b. What prediction equation (mathematical model) describes

this data?

QUADRATIC!!

Page 22: Quadratic Functions… and their applications! For a typical basketball shot, the ball’s height (in feet) will be a function of time in flight (in seconds),

c. When will the ball be at a height of 150 feet?

Height (y)Put 150 in y2.

What happened?!? Explain.

Page 23: Quadratic Functions… and their applications! For a typical basketball shot, the ball’s height (in feet) will be a function of time in flight (in seconds),

d. When will the ball be at a height of 100 feet?

Put 100 in y2 and find the intersection!

.34 seconds and

3.65 seconds

Page 24: Quadratic Functions… and their applications! For a typical basketball shot, the ball’s height (in feet) will be a function of time in flight (in seconds),

e. At what times will the ball be at a height greater than 100 feet?

65334 .x.

Page 25: Quadratic Functions… and their applications! For a typical basketball shot, the ball’s height (in feet) will be a function of time in flight (in seconds),

f. When will the ball be at a height of 40 feet?

4.53 seconds

Page 26: Quadratic Functions… and their applications! For a typical basketball shot, the ball’s height (in feet) will be a function of time in flight (in seconds),

g. When will the ball hit the ground?

Put 0 in y2 and find the intersection!

4.98 seconds

Page 27: Quadratic Functions… and their applications! For a typical basketball shot, the ball’s height (in feet) will be a function of time in flight (in seconds),

Now try it on your own!