AP Precalculus Unit 1 Notes: Understanding Polynomial Functions

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25 Terms

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Rate of change

A measure of how much the output of a function changes when the input changes.

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Average rate of change

The rate of change of a function over an interval [a,b], computed as (f(b)-f(a))/(b-a).

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Secant line

A line that passes through two points on a graph; its slope equals the average rate of change over that interval.

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Linear function

A function of the form f(x)=mx+b that has a constant rate of change and a straight-line graph.

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Slope (m)

The constant rate of change of a linear function; the change in y per 1 unit change in x.

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y-intercept (b)

The value of a linear function when x=0; the point where the graph crosses the y-axis.

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Nonlinear function

A function whose average rate of change depends on the interval chosen (its rate of change is not constant).

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Increasing (function behavior)

A function whose outputs go up as inputs go up; this does not necessarily mean the rate of change is constant.

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Polynomial function

A function that can be written as a sum of terms a_k x^k with nonnegative integer exponents k and real coefficients.

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Coefficient

A real-number multiplier of a power of x in a polynomial (e.g., an in an x^n).

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Degree (of a polynomial)

The highest exponent of x with a nonzero coefficient in a polynomial.

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Leading term

The highest-degree term of a polynomial, a_n x^n.

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Leading coefficient

The coefficient of the leading term (a_n); it strongly influences end behavior.

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Turning point

A point on a polynomial’s graph where it changes from increasing to decreasing or vice versa; a degree n polynomial can have at most n−1 turning points.

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End behavior

The way the left and right “tails” of a polynomial’s graph behave as x→∞ or x→−∞, determined by the leading term.

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Parity of degree

Whether the polynomial’s degree is even or odd, which helps predict whether both ends go the same direction (even) or opposite directions (odd).

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Zero (root)

An x-value r such that f(r)=0; graphically, it corresponds to an x-intercept.

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x-intercept

A point where the graph meets the x-axis (where y=0), corresponding to a zero of the function.

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Factor (as it relates to zeros)

If (x−r) is a factor of f(x), then r is a zero of f(x) because f(r)=0.

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Multiplicity

The number of times a zero is repeated; if x=r has multiplicity k, then (x−r)^k is a factor of the polynomial.

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Odd multiplicity

A zero multiplicity that makes the graph cross the x-axis at that intercept (the sign of the function changes).

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Even multiplicity

A zero multiplicity that makes the graph touch the x-axis and turn around (the sign of the function does not change).

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Fundamental Theorem of Algebra (counting idea)

A polynomial of degree n has exactly n complex zeros when counted with multiplicity.

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Polynomial inequality

An inequality involving a polynomial (e.g., f(x)>0 or f(x)≤0) asking where the polynomial is positive, negative, or zero.

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Sign chart (sign analysis)

A method for solving polynomial inequalities by factoring, finding zeros (critical points), testing intervals, and determining where the polynomial is positive/negative and whether to include zeros.