document.write( "Question 88824: If anyone can help I will be eternally grateful. How do you graph y>3 \n" ); document.write( "
Algebra.Com's Answer #64624 by bucky(2189)![]() ![]() ![]() You can put this solution on YOUR website! Given: \n" ); document.write( ". \n" ); document.write( "y > 3 \n" ); document.write( ". \n" ); document.write( "If you graph y = 3, you find that the graph is a horizontal line that crosses the y-axis at \n" ); document.write( "+3 as shown below: \n" ); document.write( ". \n" ); document.write( " \n" ); document.write( ". \n" ); document.write( "This graph tells you that no matter what the value of x is, the corresponding value of \n" ); document.write( "y must be 3. As examples all of the following points are on the graph: (-300,3) (-10,3), (0, 3), \n" ); document.write( "(5, 3), (200,3). As stated above, no matter what the value of x is, the value of y is 3. \n" ); document.write( ". \n" ); document.write( "But your problem says that y is greater than three. So this time, no matter what the value \n" ); document.write( "of x is the corresponding value of y must be greater than 3. As examples, the following \n" ); document.write( "points satisfy this relationship: (-300,4), (-10,15), (0,5), (5, 5), (200, 3.2). The reason \n" ); document.write( "these points satisfy the inequality is that in every one of those points the value of y \n" ); document.write( "is greater than 3. \n" ); document.write( ". \n" ); document.write( "How do you show this on a graph? Go back to the above graph that shows the graph of y = 3. \n" ); document.write( "Take your pencil and shade in every bit of space ABOVE the line y = 3. (That shading \n" ); document.write( "would be above the line and all the way from x approaching minus infinity to x approaching \n" ); document.write( "positive infinity.) Make sure your shaded area is ABOVE the line and does NOT include \n" ); document.write( "the line y = 3 but does include all values of y ABOVE the line and as high as you can go \n" ); document.write( "... including up to y approaching positive infinity. Any point in that shaded area will \n" ); document.write( "have a value of y that is greater than 3. So the graph of y > 3 is the entire shaded area \n" ); document.write( "above the line y = 3. \n" ); document.write( ". \n" ); document.write( "Although this is not part of the above problem, you could graph the inequality y < 3 in a similar \n" ); document.write( "manner. To graph this new inequality, you would shade in the entire region BELOW the graph of \n" ); document.write( "the line y = 3. Any point in this region below the line will have a value of y that is \n" ); document.write( "LESS than 3, and therefore, any point in this shaded region will satisfy the inequality \n" ); document.write( "y < 3. Therefore, this shaded region below the line y = 3 is the graph you need for this \n" ); document.write( "new inequality of y < 3. \n" ); document.write( ". \n" ); document.write( "Hope this makes sense to you and gives you a feel for graphing inequalities by shading \n" ); document.write( "in regions of the graph as it relates to an equation (in this problem, as it relates to \n" ); document.write( "the equation y = 3). \n" ); document.write( " |