Skills Practice

9. 2 4w 3.2. 10. 3 1 6w 1.6. 11. 3x. 2y . 4. 4. 12. 6.4 w. 1 7. Solve each equation. Check your solutions. 13. y. 3 . 2 {5, 1}. 14. 5a . 10 {2, 2}. 15...

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NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

1-1

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Expressions and Formulas

Find the value of each expression. 1. 18  2  3 27

2. 9  6  2  1 13

3. (3  8)2(4)  3 97

4. 5  3(2  12  2) 7

6.  3

7. (168  7)32  43 152

8. [3(5)  128  22]5 85

Lesson 1-1

6(7  5) 4

1 3

5.   [9  10(3)] 7

1 2

Evaluate each expression if r  1, s  3, t  12, v  0, and w    . 9. 6r  2s 0

10. 2st  4rs 84

11. w(s  r) 2

12. s  2r  16v 1

13. (4s)2 144

14. s2r  wt 3

15. 2(3r  w) 7

16.  4

3v  t 5s  t

rv3 s

25 2

17. w[t  (t  r)] 

18.  0 2

19. 9r2  (s2  1)t 105

20. 7s  2v   22

2w r

21. TEMPERATURE The formula K  C  273 gives the temperature in kelvins (K) for a given temperature in degrees Celsius. What is the temperature in kelvins when the temperature is 55 degrees Celsius? 328 K 5 9

22. TEMPERATURE The formula C   (F  32) gives the temperature in degrees Celsius for a given temperature in degrees Fahrenheit. What is the temperature in degrees Celsius when the temperature is 68 degrees Fahrenheit? 20C

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Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

3

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

1-2

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Properties of Real Numbers

Name the sets of numbers to which each number belongs. 1. 34 N, W, Z, Q, R

2. 525 Z, Q, R

3. 0.875 Q, R

4.  N, W, Z, Q, R

5. 9  Z, Q, R

6. 30  I, R

12 3

Name the property illustrated by each equation. 8. 3a  0  3a

Comm. () 9. 2(r  w)  2r  2w

Add. Iden. 10. 2r  (3r  4r)  (2r  3r)  4r

Distributive

 5y1 

Assoc. ()

11. 5y   1

12. 15x(1)  15x

Mult. Inv.

Mult. Iden.

13. 0.6[25(0.5)]  [0.6(25)]0.5

14. (10b  12b)  7b  (12b  10b)  7b

Assoc. ()

Comm. ()

Name the additive inverse and multiplicative inverse for each number.

1 15

15. 15 15,  4 4 5 5

5 4

17.    ,  

16. 1.25 1.25, 0.8 3 4

3 4 4 15

18. 3  3  , 

Simplify each expression. 19. 3x  5  2x  3 5x  2

20. x  y  z  y  x  z 0

21. (3g  3h)  5g  10h 2g  13h

22. a2  a  4a  3a2  1 2a2  3a  1

23. 3(m  z)  5(2m  z) 13m  8z

24. 2x  3y  (5x  3y  2z) 3x  2z

25. 6(2  v)  4(2v  1) 8  2v

26.  (15d  3)   (8  10d) 10d  3

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Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

1 3

9

1 2

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 1-2

7. 3  x  x  3

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

1-3

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Solving Equations

Write an algebraic expression to represent each verbal expression. 1. 4 times a number, increased by 7

2. 8 less than 5 times a number

4n  7

5n  8

3. 6 times the sum of a number and 5

4. the product of 3 and a number, divided by 9

3n  9

6(n  5)

5. 3 times the difference of 4 and a number 3(4  n) 6. the product of 11 and the square of a number 11n2 Write a verbal expression to represent each equation. 7–10. Sample answers 7. n  8  16

8. 8  3x  5

The difference of a number and 8 is 16.

are given.

The sum of 8 and 3 times a number is 5. y 3

9. b2  3  b

10.   2  2y

Three added to the square of a number is the number.

A number divided by 3 is the difference of 2 and twice the number.

11. If a  0.5b, and 0.5b  10, then a  10.

12. If d  1  f, then d  f  1.

Transitive ()

Subtraction ()

13. If 7x  14, then 14  7x.

14. If (8  7)r  30, then 15r  30.

Symmetric ()

Substitution ()

Solve each equation. Check your solution.

1 2

15. 4m  2  18 4

16. x  4  5x  2 

17. 3t  2t  5 5

18. 3b  7  15  2b 

19. 5x  3x  24 3

20. 4v  20  6  34 5

22 5

2a 5

21. a    3 5

22. 2.2n  0.8n  5  4n 5

Solve each equation or formula for the specified variable.

I rt

23. I  prt, for p p   xy 2

25. A   , for y y  2A  x

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

1 4

24. y   x  12, for x x  4y  48

A  2 r 2 2 r

26. A  2r2  2rh, for h h  

15

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 1-3

Name the property illustrated by each statement.

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

1-4

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Solving Absolute Value Equations

Evaluate each expression if w  0.4, x  2, y  3, and z  10. 1. 5w 2

2. 9y 27

3. 9y  z 17

4. 17z 170

5. 10z  31 131

6. 8x  3y  2y  5x 21

7. 25  5z  1 24

8. 44  2x  y 45

10. 3  1  6w 1.6

9. 24w 3.2

11. 3x  2y  4 4

12. 6.4  w  1 7

Solve each equation. Check your solutions. 13. y  3  2 {5, 1}

 43 83 

15. 3k  6  2  , 

16. 2g  6  0 {3}

17. 10  1  c {9, 11}

18. 2x  x  9 {3, 3}

19. p  7  14

20. 23w  12 {2, 2}

21. 7x  3x  2  18 {4, 4}

22. 47  y  1  11 {4, 10}

1 2

 12 56 

23. 3n  2    , 



24. 8d  4d  5  13 {2, 2}

5 1 6 6

25. 56a  2  15   , 

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

Lesson 1-4

14. 5a  10 {2, 2}



26. k  10  9

21

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

1-5

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Solving Inequalities

Solve each inequality. Describe the solution set using set-builder or interval notation. Then, graph the solution set on a number line. z 4

1.  2 {zz  8} or (∞, 8] 9

8

7

6

5

4

3

2

4

1

3. 16 3q  4 {qq 4} or (4, ∞) 1 0

1

2

3

4

5

6

3

2

1 0

1

2

3

4

2

1 0

1

2

3

4

5

2

1 0

1

2

3

4

3

2

1 0

1

2

3

4

6. 4b  9  7 {bb  4} or (∞, 4] 2

4

7. 2z 9  5z {zz 3} or (3, ∞)

3

4. 20  3s 7s {ss  2} or (∞, 2)

7

5. 3x 9 {xx  3} or [3, ∞) 4

2. 3a  7  16 {aa  3} or (∞, 3]

1 0

1

2

3

4

5

6

8. 7f  9 3f  1 {ff 2} or (2, ∞)

6

4

3

2

1 0

1

2

3

4



7 2





7 2

9. 3s  8  5s {ss  1} or [1, ∞) 10. 7t  (t  4)  25 tt   or ∞,  4

3

2

1 0

1

2

3

4

4

11. 0.7m  0.3m 2m  4 {mm  4}

3

2

1 0

1 0

1

2

3

4

5

4

or (3.4, ∞)

2

1 0

1

2

3

4

5

3

4



6

13. 1.7y  0.78 5 {yy 3.4}

2

3 4

 ∞, 34 

12. 4(5x  7)  13 xx    or

or (∞, 4] 2

1



3

2

1 0

1

2

3

4

14. 4x  9 2x  1 {xx 5} or (5, ∞)

6

1 0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

Define a variable and write an inequality for each problem. Then solve.

16. The difference of three times a number and 16 is at least 8. 3n  16  8; n  8

1 2

17. One half of a number is more than 6 less than the same number.  n n  6; n  12 18. Five less than the product of 6 and a number is no more than twice that same number.

5 6n  5  2n; n   4

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

27

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 1-5

15. Nineteen more than a number is less than 42. n  19  42; n  23

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

1-6

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice

Write an absolute value inequality for each of the following. Then graph the solution set on a number line. 1. all numbers greater than or equal to 2 or less than or equal to 2 n  2 4

3

2

1 0

1

2

3

8

4

3. all numbers less than 1 or greater than 1 n 1 4

3

2

1 0

1

2

3

2. all numbers less than 5 and greater than 5 n  5 6

4

2 0

2

4

6

8

4. all numbers between 6 and 6 n  6

8

4

6

4

2 0

2

4

6

8

Write an absolute value inequality for each graph.

n  1

5. 4

3

2

1 0

1

2

3

4

4

3

2

1 0

1

2

3

4

n  3

7.

n  4

6. 4

3

2

1 0

1

2

3

4

4

3

2

1 0

1

2

3

4

n 2.5

8.

Solve each inequality. Graph the solution set on a number line. 9. 2c  1 5 or c 0 {cc 2 4

3

2

1 0

1

2

3

4

or c  0}

11. 10 5x 5 {x2  x  1} 4

3

2

1 0

1

2

3

10. 11  4y  3  1 {y2  y  1} 4

2

1 0

1

2

3

4

12. 4a 8 or a 3 {aa  2 4

4

13. 8 3x  2  23 {x2  x  7}

3

3

2

1 0

1

2

3

4

or a  3}

14. w  4  10 or 2w  6 all real

numbers 0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

15. t 3 {tt  3 or t  3} 4

3

2

1 0

1

2

3

3

2

1 0

1

2

3

4 ©

2 0

2

4

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

6

4

2

1 0

1

2

3

4

3

2

1 0

1

2

3

4

2

3

4

18. p  2  2 4

4

19. n  5 7 {n2  n  12}

3

16. 6x 12 {x2  x  2}

4

17. 7r 14 {rr  2 or r 2} 4

4

8

3

2

1 0

1

20. h  1 5 {hh  6 or h  4}

8 10 12

8

33

6

4

2 0

2

4

6

8

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 1-6

Solving Compound and Absolute Value Inequalities

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

2-1

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Relations and Functions

Determine whether each relation is a function. Write yes or no.

3.

D

R

100 200 300

50 100 150

x

y

1

2

2

4

3

6

yes

2.

D

no

R 1

3 5

yes

4.

Lesson 2-1

1.

no

y

x

O

Graph each relation or equation and find the domain and range. Then determine whether the relation or equation is a function. 5. {(2, 3), (2, 4), (2, 1)}

6. {(2, 6), (6, 2)} y

y

x

O

x

O

D  {2}, R  {3, 1, 4}; no 7. {(3, 4), (2, 4), (1, 1), (3, 1)}

D  {2, 6}, R  {2, 6}; yes 8. x  2 y

y

O O

x

x

D  {3, 2, 1, 3}, R  {1, 4}; yes

D  {2}, R  all reals; no

Find each value if f(x)  2x  1 and g(x)  2  x2. 9. f(0) 1

10. f(12) 23

11. g(4) 14

12. f(2) 5

13. g(1) 1

14. f(d) 2d  1

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Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

59

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

2-2

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Linear Equations

State whether each equation or function is linear. Write yes or no. If no, explain your reasoning. 1. y  3x

2. y  2  5x

yes

yes

3. 2x  y  10

4. f(x)  4x2

yes

No; the exponent of x is not 1.

3 x

1 3

5.    y  15

6.  x  y  8

No; x is in a denominator. 7. g(x)  8

yes 8. h(x) 

No; x is inside a square root.

Write each equation in standard form. Identify A, B, and C. 9. y  x x  y  0; 1, 1, 0

10. y  5x  1 5x  y  1; 5, 1, 1

11. 2x  4  7y 2x  7y  4; 2, 7, 4

12. 3x  2y  2 3x  2y  2; 3, 2, 2

13. 5y  9  0 5y  9; 0, 5, 9

14. 6y  14  8x 4x  3y  7; 4, 3, 7

Find the x-intercept and the y-intercept of the graph of each equation. Then graph the equation. 15. y  3x  6 2, 6

16. y  2x 0, 0 y

y O

x

O

17. x  y  5 5, 5

18. 2x  5y  10 5, 2

y

y

O O

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

x

x

x

65

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 2-2

yes

x  3

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

2-3

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Slope

Find the slope of the line that passes through each pair of points.

2 3

2. (0, 2), (3, 0)  

1. (1, 5), (1, 3) 4

3 4

3. (1, 9), (0, 6) 3

4. (8, 5), (4, 2)  

5. (3, 5), (3, 1) undefined 6. (2, 2), (10, 2) 0

7. (4, 5), (2, 7) 1

8. (2, 4), (3, 2) 

6 5

9. (5, 2), (3, 2) 0

Graph the line passing through the given point with the given slope. 10. (0, 4), m  1

11. (2, 4), m  1 y

y O

x

12. (3, 5), m  2

13. (2, 1), m  2 y

y

O

O

x

x

Lesson 2-3

O

x

Graph the line that satisfies each set of conditions. 14. passes through (0, 1), perpendicular to 1 a line whose slope is  3

15. passes through (0, 5), parallel to the graph of y  1 y

y O O

x

x

16. HIKING Naomi left from an elevation of 7400 feet at 7:00 A.M. and hiked to an elevation of 9800 feet by 11:00 A.M. What was her rate of change in altitude? 600 ft/h

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Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

71

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

2-4

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Writing Linear Equations

State the slope and y-intercept of the graph of each equation. 2. y    x  3   , 3

3 4

2 3

2 3

3 5

3 5

1. y  7x  5 7, 5

4. 3x  4y  4   , 1

3. y   x  , 0

3 2

4 7

5. 7y  4x  7  , 1

6. 3x  2y  6  0  , 3

7. 2x  y  5 2, 5

8. 2y  6  5x   , 3

5 2

Write an equation in slope-intercept form for each graph. 9.

10.

y

11.

y

(1, 2)

(0, 3) x

O

y

x

O (–3, –1)

x

O

(4, –1)

(–1, –4) (3, –3)

y  3x  1

y  1

y  2x  3

Write an equation in slope-intercept form for the line that satisfies each set of conditions. 12. slope 3, passes through (1, 3)

13. slope 1, passes through (0, 0)

y  x

14. slope 2, passes through (0, 5)

15. slope 3, passes through (2, 0)

y  2x  5 16. passes through (1, 2) and (3, 1)

y  3x  6 17. passes through (2, 4) and (1, 8)

3 7 y   x 2

y  4x  4

2

18. x-intercept 2, y-intercept 6

5 2

19. x-intercept  , y-intercept 5

y  3x  6

y  2x  5 1 3

20. passes through (3, 1), perpendicular to the graph of y    x  4. y  3x  10

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

77

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 2-4

y  3x  6

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

2-5

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Modeling Real-World Data: Using Scatter Plots

For Exercises 1–3, complete parts a–c for each set of data. a. Draw a scatter plot. b. Use two ordered pairs to write a prediction equation. c. Use your prediction equation to predict the missing value.

2.

3.

©

1a.

y

x

y

1

1

12

3

5

9

4

7

6

6

11

7

12

8

15

10

?

x

y

5

9

32

10

17

24

20

22

16

25

30

35

38

40

44

50

?

x

y

1

16

2

16

24

3

?

18

4

22

5

30

7

34

8

36

15

3 0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8 x

1b. Sample answer using (1, 1) and (8, 15): y  2x  1 1c. Sample answer: 19

2a.

y 40

8 0

5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 x

2b. Sample answer using (5, 9) and (40, 44): y  x  4 2c. Sample answer: 54

3a.

y 36 30

12 6 0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8 x

3b. Sample answer using (2, 16) and (7, 34): y  3.6x  8.8 3c. Sample answer: 19.6

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

83

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 2-5

1.

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

2-6

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice

Identify each function as S for step, C for constant, A for absolute value, or P for piecewise. 1.

2.

y

x

O

3.

y

y

x

O

x

O

S

C

A

Graph each function. Identify the domain and range. 4. f(x)  x  1

5. f(x)  x  3 f(x)

f(x)

x

O x

O

D  all reals, R  all integers

D  all reals, R  all integers 7. f(x)  x  1

6. g(x)  2x

f(x)

g(x)

D  all reals, R  nonnegative reals 8. f(x) 

x2 ifif xx  00

D  all reals, R  {yy  1} 9. h(x) 

 3x if x1 if x1> 1 h(x)

f(x)

O

x O

D  all reals, R  {yy  0 or y  2} ©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

x

O

x

O

x

D  {xx  1 or x 1}, R  {yy 2} 89

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 2-6

Special Functions

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

2-7

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Graphing Inequalities

Graph each inequality. 2. y x  2 y

3. x  y 4 y

y

O

x

O

x O

4. x  3  y

5. 2  y  x y

6. y  x y

y

O O

x

8. 9x  3y  6 0

y

10. y  7 9

y

O

x

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

O

y

y

x

x

12. y x

11. x 5

y

©

x

9. y  1  2x

y

x

O

O

x

7. x  y 2

O

x

Lesson 2-7

1. y 1

O

95

x

O

x

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

3-1

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Solving Systems of Equations By Graphing

Solve each system of equations by graphing. 2. y  3x  6

y  0 (2, 0)

1 2

y    x  1 (2, 2)

y  2x  4 (2, 0)

y

y

y

x

O

3. y  4  3x

4. y  4  x

5. y  2x  2 1 y  x  5 3

y  x  2 (3, 1) y

6. y  x

(3, 4)

y  3x  4 (1, 1) y

y

O

x

O

x

O

x x

O x

O

7. x  y  3 x  y  1 (2, 1)

8. x  y  4 2x  5y  8 (4, 0)

y

9. 3x  2y  4 2x  y  1 (2, 5) y

y O

x

x

O x

O

Graph each system of equations and describe it as consistent and independent, consistent and dependent, or inconsistent. 10. y  3x y  3x  2

11. y  x  5 2x  2y  10

y

y

y O

O

12. 2x  5y  10 3x  y  15 x

x 2 O

inconsistent ©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

consistent and dependent 121

x

2

consistent and independent Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 3-1

1. x  2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

3-2

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Solving Systems of Equations Algebraically

Solve each system of equations by using substitution. 1. m  n  20 m  n  4 (8, 12)

2. x  3y  3 4x  3y  6 (3, 2)

3. w  z  1 2w  3z  12 (3, 2)

4. 3r  s  5 2r  s  5 (2, 1)

5. 2b  3c  4 b  c  3 (13, 10)

6. x  y  1 2x  3y  12 (3, 2)

Solve each system of equations by using elimination.

10. 2f  3g  9 f  g  2 (3, 1)

8. 2j  k  3 3j  k  2 (1, 1)

9. 3c  2d  2 3c  4d  50 (6, 8)

11. 2x  y  1 x  2y  3 (1, 1)

12. 2x  y  12 2x  y  6 no solution

Solve each system of equations by using either substitution or elimination. 13. r  t  5 2r  t  4 (1, 6)

14. 2x  y  5 1 4x  y  2   , 4

15. x  3y  12 2x  y  11 (3, 5)

16. 2p  3q  6 2p  3q  6 (3, 0)

17. 6w  8z  16 3w  4z  8

18. c  d  6 c  d  0 (3, 3)

19. 2u  4v  6 u  2v  3 no solution

20. 3a  b  1 3a  b  5 (1, 2)

21. 2x  y  6 3x  2y  16 (4, 2)

22. 3y  z  6 3y  z  6 (2, 0)

23. c  2d  2 2c  5d  3 (4, 1)

24. 3r  2s  1 2r  3s  9 (3, 5)





infinitely many

25. The sum of two numbers is 12. The difference of the same two numbers is 4. Find the numbers. 4, 8 26. Twice a number minus a second number is 1. Twice the second number added to three times the first number is 9. Find the two numbers. 1, 3

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

127

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 3-2

7. 2p  q  5 3p  q  5 (2, 1)

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

3-3

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Solving Systems of Inequalities by Graphing

Solve each system of inequalities by graphing. 2. x  3 y  3

3. x  2 x  4 no solution

y

O

y

y

x

4. y  x y  x

O

x

5. y  4x y  3x  2 y

O

O

x

6. x  y  1 3x  y  4 y

y

x

7. y  3 x  2y  12

O

x

8. y  2x  3 yx2

y

O

x

Lesson 3-3

1. x  1 y  1

9. x  y  4 2x  y  4 y

y

2 O

2

x

O

x

O

x

Find the coordinates of the vertices of the figure formed by each system of inequalities. 10. y  0 x0 y  x  1

(0, 0), (0, 1), (1, 0)

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

11. y  3  x y3 x  5

(0, 3), (5, 3), (5, 8)

133

12. x  2 yx2 x  y  2 (2, 4),

(2, 4), (2, 0)

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

3-4

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Linear Programming

Graph each system of inequalities. Name the coordinates of the vertices of the feasible region. Find the maximum and minimum values of the given function for this region. 2. x  1 y6 yx2 f(x, y)  x  y

3. x  0 y0 y7x f(x, y)  3x  y y

y

y

O

x

x

O

x

O

max.: 2, min.: 5

max.: 9, min.: 3 4. x  1 xy6 f(x, y)  x  2y

max.: 21, min.: 0

5. y  2x y6x y6 f(x, y)  4x  3y

y

6. y  x  2 y  3x  2 yx4 f(x, y)  3x  5y y

y

O O

max.: 13, no min.

x

x

x

O

no max., min.: 20

max.: 22, min.: 2

7. MANUFACTURING A backpack manufacturer produces an internal frame pack and an external frame pack. Let x represent the number of internal frame packs produced in one hour and let y represent the number of external frame packs produced in one hour. Then the inequalities x  3y  18, 2x  y  16, x  0, and y  0 describe the constraints for manufacturing both packs. Use the profit function f(x)  50x  80y and the constraints given to determine the maximum profit for manufacturing both backpacks for the given constraints. $620

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

139

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 3-4

1. x  2 x5 y1 y4 f(x, y)  x  y

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

3-5

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Solving Systems of Equations in Three Variables

Solve each system of equations. 1. 2a  c  10 (5, 5, 20) b  c  15 a  2b  c  5

2. x  y  z  3 (0, 2, 1) 13x  2z  2 x  5z  5

3. 2x  5y  2z  6 (3, 2, 1) 5x  7y  29 z1

4. x  4y  z  1 no solution 3x  y  8z  0 x  4y  z  10

5. 2z  6 (2, 1, 3) 2x  3y  z  2 x  2y  3z  9

6. 3x  2y  2z  2 (2, 1, 3) x  6y  2z  2 x  2y  0

7. x  5z  5 (0, 0, 1) y  3x  0 13x  2z  2

8. 3r  2t  1 (1, 6, 2) 4r  s  2t  6 r  s  4t  3 10. 5m  3n  p  4 (2, 3, 5) 3m  2n  0 2m  n  3p  8

11. 2x  2y  2z  2 infinitely many 2x  3y  2z  4 x  y  z  1

12. x  2y  z  4 (1, 2, 1) 3x  y  2z  3 x  3y  z  6

13. 3x  2y  z  1 (5, 7, 0) x  y  z  2 5x  2y  10z  39

14. 3x  5y  2z  12 infinitely many x  4y  2z  8 3x  5y  2z  12

15. 2x  y  3z  2 (1, 3, 1) x  y  z  3 3x  2y  3z  12

16. 2x  4y  3z  0 (3, 0, 2) x  2y  5z  13 5x  3y  2z  19

17. 2x  y  2z  2 (1, 2, 3) 3x  3y  z  0 xyz2

18. x  2y  2z  1 infinitely many x  2y  z  6 3x  6y  6z  3

19. The sum of three numbers is 18. The sum of the first and second numbers is 15, and the first number is 3 times the third number. Find the numbers. 9, 6, 3

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

145

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 3-5

9. x  y  3z  3 no solution 2x  2y  6z  6 y  5z  3

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

4-1

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Introduction to Matrices

 3 2 4 1. 1 4 0 2  3

2. [0 15] 1  2

3 2 3. 1 8 2  2

 6 1 2 4. 3 4 5 3  3 2 7 9

9 3 3 6 5. 3 4 4 5 2  4

1  6. 1 1 4  1 3

Lesson 4-1

State the dimensions of each matrix.

Solve each equation. 7. [5x 3y]  [15 12] (3, 4)

 7x 14 9.  14   2y (2, 7)

8. [3x  2]  [7] 3

10. [2x 8y z]  [10 16 1] (5, 2, 1)

 8  x 4 11. 2y  8  2 (4, 5)

20 10x  12. 56  6y   32 (2, 4)

 5x 20 13.  24   8y (4, 3)

3x  2  5x  2 14. 7y  2  3y  10 (0, 2)

4x  1  3x 15. 9y  5   y  3 (1, 1)

16. 

 x  9 17.  16  4y (9, 4, 3)  3z  9

 5x 4x  1 13 (1, 4, 0) 18. 4y  3    8z  4z

 2x  6y 19.  y  2   x (3, 1)

 x  4y 20. 3y   x  3 (12, 3)

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

 3x  1 18  7 2y  4 12 4z  12 28 (2, 11, 7)

171

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

4-2

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Operations with Matrices

Perform the indicated matrix operations. If the matrix does not exist, write impossible. 5] [9

8 3  0 7  8 10 2. 1 1   6 2 7 3

1]

 4 3. [3 1 6]   1 impossible  2

5. 3[9 4 3] [27

8 4 5 1 2 9 9 2 14 4. 1 8 6  4 6 4  5 14 2

12 9]

2 5 1 1 7. 2  5 9  1 1

6. [6 3]  4[4 7] [10 31]

 5 9 9 17

4 6  6 5 8 40 9. 5  10 1  2 3 2  44 1 1 1  1 0

3

5

 8 8. 3  0   3

 2 4  2  10

 16  8 49

5  3 1 3 1 1 10. 3 4 7 5  2 6 6 3

 7 5 1 24 9 21

2 2 2 3 4 Use A  3 4 3 , B   1 2 , and C   3 1 to find the following. 11. A  B

5 4 5 1

12. B  C

13. B  A

1 0 3 5

14. A  B  C

15. 3B

 6 6  3 6

17. A  4C

©

 15 14 8 1

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

16. 5C

 5 2 2 3

 15 20 15 5

18. 2B  3A

177

2 8 8 2

 13 10  14 5

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 4-2

1. [5 4]  [4

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

4-3

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Multiplying Matrices

Determine whether each matrix product is defined. If so, state the dimensions of the product. 1. A2  5  B5  1 2  1

2. M1  3  N3  2 1  2

3. B3  2  A3  2 undefined

4. R4  4  S4  1 4  1

5. X3  3  Y3  4 3  4

6. A6  4  B4  5 6  5

Find each product, if possible.

5 6  2 5 28 19 8. 2 1   3 1  7 9

2 7. [3 2]  1 [8]

3 5

 3  1 3 10.  2  1 1 not possible

 0 1 11. [3 4]   2 2 [8 11]

2 3 2  1 12.  3  [2 3 2]  6 9 6

 5 4 13.  6  8 not possible  3

 2 2 0 3 6 5  14.  4  15 3 1 3 0

4 4  3 3 12 20 15. 2 1   0 8 2  6  2 3

0 1 1 2 4 16. 1 1 0  2 2 4



6

6 12  3 9

0

1 3 2  3 1 , and scalar c  2 to determine whether the Use A  2 2 1 , B   5 1 , C   1 0 following equations are true for the given matrices. 17. (AC)c  A(Cc) yes

18. AB  BA no

19. B(A  C)  AB  BC no

20. (A  B)c  Ac  Bc yes

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

183

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 4-3

 1 3  3 9. 1 1   2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

4-4

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Transformations with Matrices

For Exercises 1–3, use the following information. Triangle ABC with vertices A(2, 3), B(0, 4), and C(3, 3) is translated 3 units right and 1 unit down. 1. Write the translation matrix.

 3 3 3 1 1 1

y

x

O

2. Find the coordinates of ABC. A(5, 2), B(3, 3), C(0, 4) 3. Graph the preimage and the image. For Exercises 4–6, use the following information. The vertices of RST are R(3, 1), S(2, 1), and T(1, 3). The triangle is dilated so that its perimeter is twice the original perimeter. 4. Write the coordinates of RST in a vertex matrix.

y

3 2 1  1 1 3

5. Find the coordinates of the image RST.

x

O

R(6, 2), S(4, 2), T (2, 6)

6. Graph RST and RST.

For Exercises 7–10, use the following information. The vertices of DEF are D(4, 0), E(0, 1), and F(2, 3). The triangle is reflected over the x-axis. 7. Write the coordinates of DEF in a vertex matrix.

4 0 2 0 1 3

8. Write the reflection matrix for this situation.

1 0 0 1

y

x

O

Lesson 4-4

9. Find the coordinates of DEF. D(4, 0), E (0, 1), F (2, 3) 10. Graph DEF and DEF. For Exercises 11–14, use the following information. Triangle XYZ with vertices X(1, 3), Y(4, 1), and Z(2, 5) is rotated 180º counterclockwise about the origin. 11. Write the coordinates of the triangle in a vertex matrix.

y

 1 4 2 1 5 3

12. Write the rotation matrix for this situation.

1 0  0 1

O

x

13. Find the coordinates of XYZ.

X(1, 3), Y(4, 1), Z(2, 5)

14. Graph the preimage and the image. ©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

189

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

4-5

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Determinants

Find the value of each determinant. 5 2 1. 1 3 13

10 9 2.  5 8 35

1 6 3. 1 7 1

2 5 4. 3 1 13

0 9 5. 5 8 45

3 12 6. 2 8 0

5 2 7. 8 6 14

3 1 8. 8 7 13

9 2 9. 4 1 1

5 10. 1 1 6 11

1 3 11. 3 4 5

12 12.  1

4 4 52

5 13. 3 6 11 3

1 3 14. 5  2 17

1 14 15. 5  2 68

2 16. 1 0 4 4

2 2 10 17. 1 4

6 18. 1 2 5 17

Evaluate each determinant using expansion by minors. 1 1 1 2

6 1 2 20. 5 1 3

1 1 2 2

2 6 21. 3 5 2 1

1 1 1 2

Evaluate each determinant using diagonals.

2 1 2 22. 3 2 3

©

6 5 3 1

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

3 1 0 23. 1 3 2

2 4 8 0

195

3 2 24. 1 1 3 1

2 4 40 0

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 4-5

2 1 2 19. 3 2 3

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

4-6

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Cramer’s Rule

1. 2a  3b  6 2a  b  2 (3, 4)

2. 3x  y  2 2x  y  3 (1, 1)

3. 2m  3n  6 m  3n  6 (0, 2)

4. x  y  2 2x  3y  9 (3, 1)

5. 2x  y  4 7x  2y  3 (1, 2)

6. 3r  s  7 5r  2s  8 (6, 11)

7. 4g  5h  1 g  3h  2 (1, 1)

8. 7x  5y  8 9x  2y  3 (1, 3)

9. 3x  4y  2 4x  3y  12 (6, 4)

Lesson 4-6

Use Cramer’s Rule to solve each system of equations.

10. 2x  y  5 3x  y  5 (2, 1)

11. 3p  6q  18 2p  3q  5 (4, 1)

12. x  2y  1 2x  y  3 (1, 1)

13. 5c  3d  5 2c  9d  2 (1, 0)

14. 5t  2v  2 2t  3v  8 (2, 4)

15. 5a  2b  14 3a  4b  11 (3, 0.5)

16. 65w  8z  83 9w  4z  0 (1, 2.25)

17. GEOMETRY The two sides of an angle are contained in the lines whose equations are 3x  2y  4 and x  3y  5. Find the coordinates of the vertex of the angle. (2, 1) Use Cramer’s Rule to solve each system of equations. 18. a  b  5c  2 3a  b  2c  3 4a  2b  c  3 (2, 5, 1)

19. x  3y  z  5 2x  5y  z  12 x  2y  3z  13 ( 3, 2, 4)

20. 3c  5d  2e  4 2c  3d  4c  3 4c  2d  3e  0 (1, 1, 2)

21. r  4s  t  6 2r  s  3t  0 3r  2s  t  4 (1, 1, 1)

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

201

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

4-7

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Identity and Inverse Matrices

1 0  1 0 1. X  1 1, Y  1 1 yes

3 2 3 1 2. P  1 1, Q   1 2 yes

0 1 0 1 3. M   0 3, N   0 3 no

2 5  2 5 4. A  1 2, B   1 2 yes

 0 1  0 7 7 5. V  7 0, W  1 yes  0 7 

1 2 1 4 3 3 6. X   1 2, Y  1 1 yes    6 6



 4 3 7. G   1 2, H 



 2 3 11 11 1 4 yes      11 11 









4 4 0.125 0.125 8. D   4 4, E  0.125 0.125 no

Find the inverse of each matrix, if it exists.

1  0 2 0 2 9. 4 0   0 8 4

1 1  2 1 10. 3 2  1 3

9 3 11. 6 2 no inverse exists

4 2 4 1  0 12. 6 0  24 6 2

1  3 1  1 1  13.  3 3 6 3 1

3 6 14. 1 2 no inverse exists

1 1 1 1 1 15. 1  1  2 1 1

1  2 5 4 5 16.  1 2   13 1 4

1 0 7 0 7 17. 7 0   49 7 0

10 8 18.  5 4 no inverse exists

1  8 8 10 8 19. 10 8   160 10 10

2 0 1 2 0 20. 0 2  4 0 2

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

207

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 4-7

Determine whether each pair of matrices are inverses.

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

4-8

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Using Matrices to Solve Systems of Equations

Write a matrix equation for each system of equations. 1. x  y  5 2x  y  1

2. 3a  8b  16 4a  3b  3

1 1 x 5 2 1  y  1

3 8  a  16 4 3  b   3

3. m  3n  3 4m  3n  6

4. 2c  3d  6 3c  4d  7

1 3  m 3 4 3   n   6

2 3  c 6 3 4  d  7

5. r  s  1 2r  3s  12

6. x  y  5 3x  2y  10

1 1 x  5 3 2  y  10

7. 6x  y  2z  4 3x  2y  z  10 xyz3

Lesson 4-8

1 1   r   1 3 s 12 2

8. a  b  c  5 3a  2b  c  0 2a  3b  8

 6 1 2 x 4 2 1  y   10  3 1 1  z  3  1

1 1 1  a 5 2 1  b  0 3 3 0  c 8 2

Solve each matrix equation or system of equations by using inverse matrices.

1 3 w 7 9. 4 3   z   1 (2, 3)

4 3  x  6 10. 1 3   y  3 (3, 2)

5 8  a 1 11. 3 1   b    7 (3, 2)

 7 3  m  15 (3, 2) 12.  5 4  n  23

1  3 12  c  25 13.  2 6   d  12 7,  3

5  5 6 m 15 14. 12 6   n    2 1,  3







15. p  3q  6 2p  3q  6 (0, 2)

16. x  3y  2 4x  5y  1 (1, 1)

17. 2m  2n  8 6m  4n  18 (1, 3)

18. 3a  b  9 5a  2b  14 (4, 3)

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

213



Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

5-1

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Monomials

Simplify. Assume that no variable equals 0. 2. c5  c2  c2 c 9

1 a

3. a4  a3  7

4. x5  x4  x x 2

5. (g4)2 g 8

6. (3u)3 27u 3

7. (x)4 x 4

8. 5(2z)3 40z 3

9. (3d)4 81d 4 11. (r7)3 r 21 k9 k

1 k

10. (2t2)3 8t 6 s15 s

3 12.  12 s

13.  10 

14. (3f 3g)3 27f 9g 3

15. (2x)2(4y)2 64x 2y 2

16. 2gh( g3h5) 2g 4h 6

17. 10x2y3(10xy8) 100x 3y11

18.  3 5  2

6a4bc8 36a b c

c7 6a b

 19.  3 7 2

Lesson 5-1

1. b4  b3 b 7

24wz7 8z 2 3w z w

2 10pq4r 2q 5p q r p

20.   3 2 2

Express each number in scientific notation. 21. 53,000 5.3  104

22. 0.000248 2.48  104

23. 410,100,000 4.101  108

24. 0.00000805 8.05  106

Evaluate. Express the result in scientific notation. 25. (4  103)(1.6  106) 6.4  103

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

9.6  107 1.5  10

10 26.  3 6.4  10

241

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

5-2

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Polynomials

Determine whether each expression is a polynomial. If it is a polynomial, state the degree of the polynomial. 1. x2  2x  2 yes; 2

b2c d

1 2

3. 8xz   y yes; 2

2.  4 no

Simplify. 4. (g  5)  (2g  7)

5. (5d  5)  (d  1)

6. (x2  3x  3)  (2x2  7x  2)

7. (2f 2  3f  5)  (2f 2  3f  8)

3x 2

 4x  5

8. (4r2  6r  2)  (r2  3r  5)

5r 2  9r  3

4d  4

4f 2  6f  3

9. (2x2  3xy)  (3x2  6xy  4y2)

x 2  3xy  4y 2

10. (5t  7)  (2t2  3t  12)

11. (u  4)  (6  3u2  4u)

12. 5(2c2  d 2)

13. x2(2x  9)

14. 2q(3pq  4q4)

15. 8w(hk2  10h3m4  6k5w3)

2t 2  8t  5

10c 2  5d 2

6pq 2



3u 2  5u  10 2x 3  9x 2

8hk 2w  80h 3m 4w  48k 5w 4

8q 5

16. m2n3(4m2n2  2mnp  7)

17. 3s2y(2s4y2  3sy3  4)

18. (c  2)(c  8)

19. (z  7)(z  4)

4m 4n 5  2m 3n 4p  7m 2n 3

c2

 10c  16

20. (a  5)2

a2

 10a  25

22. (r  2s)(r  2s)

r2



9  4b 2

©

6s 6y 3  9s3y 4  12s 2y z 2  3z  28

21. (2x  3)(3x  5)

6x 2  19x  15

23. (3y  4)(2y  3)

6y 2  y  12

4s 2

24. (3  2b)(3  2b)

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

Lesson 5-2

3g  12

25. (3w  1)2

9w 2  6w  1

247

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

5-3

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Dividing Polynomials

Simplify. 10c  6 2

2.  3x  5

12x  20 4

3.  5y 2  2y  1

15y3  6y2  3y 3y

4.  3x  1  

5. (15q6  5q2)(5q4)1

6. (4f 5  6f 4  12f 3  8f 2)(4f 2)1

1.  5c  3

12x2  4x  8 4x

2 x

3f 2 2

1 q

3q 2  2

f 3    3f  2

7. (6j 2k  9jk2) 3jk

8. (4a2h2  8a3h  3a4) (2a2)

3a 2 2

2j  3k

2h 2  4ah  

9. (n2  7n  10) (n  5)

10. (d 2  4d  3) (d  1)

n2

d3

11. (2s2  13s  15) (s  5)

12. (6y2  y  2)(2y  1)1

3y  2

13. (4g2  9) (2g  3)

Lesson 5-3

2s  3

14. (2x2  5x  4) (x  3)

1

2g  3

2x  1   x3

u2  5u  12 u3

2x2  5x  4 x3

15. 

16. 

12

1

u8 u3

2x  1   x3

17. (3v2  7v  10)(v  4)1

18. (3t4  4t3  32t2  5t  20)(t  4)1

10

3v  5   v4

3t 3  8t 2  5

y3  y2  6 y2

2x3  x2  19x  15 x3

19. 

20. 

18

3

y 2  3y  6   y2

2x 2  5x  4   x3

21. (4p3  3p2  2p) ( p  1)

22. (3c4  6c3  2c  4)(c  2)1

3

8

4p 2  p  3   p1

3c 3  2   c2

23. GEOMETRY The area of a rectangle is x3  8x2  13x  12 square units. The width of the rectangle is x  4 units. What is the length of the rectangle? x 2  4x  3 units ©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

253

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

5-4

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Factoring Polynomials

Factor completely. If the polynomial is not factorable, write prime. 1. 7x2  14x

2. 19x3  38x2

3. 21x3  18x2y  24xy2

4. 8j 3k  4jk3  7

19x 2(x  2)

3x(7x2  6xy  8y 2)

prime

5. a2  7a  18

6. 2ak  6a  k  3

7. b2  8b  7

8. z2  8z  10

(a  9)(a  2)

(b  7)(b  1)

9. m2  7m  18

(m  2)(m  9)

(2a  1)(k  3)

prime 10. 2x2  3x  5

(2x  5)(x  1)

11. 4z2  4z  15

12. 4p2  4p  24

13. 3y2  21y  36

14. c2  100

15. 4f 2  64

16. d 2  12d  36

17. 9x2  25

18. y2  18y  81

(2z  5)(2z  3)

3(y  4)(y  3)

4(f  4)(f  4)

4(p  2)(p  3)

(c  10)(c  10)

(d  6)2

Lesson 5-4

7x(x  2)

(y  9)2

prime 19. n3  125

(n  5)(n 2  5n  25)

20. m4  1

(m 2  1)(m  1)(m  1)

Simplify. Assume that no denominator is equal to 0. x2  7x  18 x  2

 21.  x2  4x  45 x  5 x5

x  10x  25  23.  2 x 2

x  5x

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

x2  4x  3 x  1

 22.  x2  6x  9 x  3 x2  6x  7 x  1

 24.  x7 x2  49

259

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

5-5

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Roots of Real Numbers

Use a calculator to approximate each value to three decimal places. 1. 230  15.166

2. 38  6.164

3. 152  12.329

4. 5.6  2.366

5. 88  4.448

6. 222  6.055

7. 0.34  0.764

8. 500  3.466

3

4

3

5

Simplify. 9. 81  9

10. 144  12

11.  (5)2 5

12.  52 not a real number

13. 0.36  0.6

14. 

15. 8  2 3

16. 27  3

3

18. 32  2

4  9

3

5

19. 81  3

20.  y2 | y |

21.  125s3 5s

22.  64x6 8| x 3|

23. 27a 6 3a 2

24.  m8n4 m 4n 2

25.  100p4 q2 10p 2| q |

26.  16w4v8 2| w | v 2

27.  (3c)4 9c 2

28.  (a  b )2 | a  b |

4

3

3

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

Lesson 5-5

17. 0.064  0.4

 23

4

265

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

5-6

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Radical Expressions

1. 24  26 

Lesson 5-6

Simplify. 2. 75  53 

3

4

3. 16  22 

4. 48  2 3 

5. 4 50x5 20x 22x 

6.  64a4b4 2| ab | 4 

3

7.

3

1 8

  d 2f 5

3

 3  7

4

4

d f  12 f 

9. 

11.

4

2 2

21  

8.

10.

7

g 10gz    5z 2g3  5z

 56 |s |t 25  s2t 36

 3

3

 2 6   9 3

12. (33  )(53  ) 45

13. (412  )(320  ) 4815 

14. 2   8   50  82 

15. 12   23   108  63 

16. 85   45   80 

18. (2  3  )(6  2  ) 12  22   63 

6 

19. (1  5  )(1  5  ) 4

20. (3  7  )(5  2  ) 15  32   57 

14 

21. (2   6  ) 8  43 

22.  

 12  42 4 7 3  2 

24.  

17. 248   75   12 

2

23.  

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

3 

5 

 21  32 3 47 7  2   40  56 5 58 8  6 

271

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

5-7

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Rational Exponents

Write each expression in radical form. 1 

1 

6

3 

1. 3 6

2 

2  122 or (12 ) 3

3. 12 3

5

8 

2. 8 5 3

3 

4. (s3) 5 s s4 5

5. 51  51

1  2 3 

7.  153 15 4 4

3

6. 37  37

Lesson 5-7

Write each radical using rational exponents. 1  3 1 

1 

2 

8.  6xy2 6 3 x 3 y 3 3

Evaluate each expression. 1 

1 

9. 32 5 2 1

11. 27

3

10. 81 4 3

1  3

3 

4 

13. 16 2 64 1 

1 2

1

12. 42  14. (243) 5 81 5 

15. 27 3  27 3 729

3  2

8  27

 49 

16. 

Simplify each expression. 12 

3 

17. c 5  c 5 c 3

  1  2

3

19. q

6

 11

21. x

1

 

q

3  2

5  11

x  x 1 

y 2 y4 23.   1  y y4 12

25. 64 

©

2 

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

2 

16 

18. m 9  m 9 m 2 4 

p5  p

1

5

20. p

2 

x3 22.  1  x4

x 1 

5  12

2 

n3 n3 24.   1 1   n6  n2 n

26.  49a8b2 | a | 7b  8

277

4

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

5-8

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Radical Equations and Inequalities

Solve each equation or inequality.

1 25

3. 5j  1 

1 

2. x  3  7 16

1 

4. v 2  1  0 no solution

3

5. 18  3y 2  25 no solution

6. 2w   4 32

7.  b  5  4 21

8.  3n  1 5 8

3

9.  3r  6  3 11

11.  k  4  1  5 40

1 

Lesson 5-8

1. x  5 25

10. 2   3p  7 6 3

1 

5 2

12. (2d  3) 3  2 

1 

13. (t  3) 3  2 11

14. 4  (1  7u) 3  0 9

15.  3z  2   z  4 no solution

16.  g  1   2g  7  8

17.  x  1  4 x  1 no solution

18. 5   s36 3s4

19. 2   3x  3 7 1 x 26

20.  2a  4   6 2  a  16

21. 2 4r  3 10 r 7

22. 4   3x  1 3   x 0

23.  y  4  3  3 y 32

24. 3 11r  3  15    r  2

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

1 3

3 11

283

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

5-9

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Complex Numbers

Simplify. 1. 36  6i

2. 196  14i

3.  81x6 9 | x 3 | i

4. 23   46  232 

5. (3i)(2i)(5i) 30i

6. i 11 i

7. i 65 i

8. (7  8i)  (12  4i) 5  12i 10. (10  4i)  (7  3i) 3  7i

11. (2  i)(2  3i) 1  8i

12. (2  i)(3  5i) 11  7i

13. (7  6i)(2  3i) 4  33i

14. (3  4i)(3  4i) 25

6  8i

8  6i 15.   3 3i

3  6i

3i 16.   10 4  2i

Lesson 5-9

9. (3  5i)  (18  7i) 15  2i

Solve each equation. 17. 3x2  3  0 i

18. 5x2  125  0 5i

19. 4x2  20  0 i 5 

20. x2  16  0 4i

21. x2  18  0 3i 2 

22. 8x2  96  0 2i 3 

Find the values of m and n that make each equation true. 23. 20  12i  5m  4ni 4, 3

24. m  16i  3  2ni 3, 8

25. (4  m)  2ni  9  14i 5, 7

26. (3  n)  (7m  14)i  1  7i 3, 2

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

289

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

6-1

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Graphing Quadratic Functions

For each quadratic function, find the y-intercept, the equation of the axis of symmetry, and the x-coordinate of the vertex. 1. f(x)  3x2

2. f(x)  x2  1

3. f(x)  x2  6x  15

4. f(x)  2x2  11

5. f(x)  x2  10x  5

6. f(x)  2x2  8x  7

1; x  0; 0

11; x  0; 0

15; x  3; 3

5; x  5; 5

7; x  2; 2

Complete parts a–c for each quadratic function. a. Find the y-intercept, the equation of the axis of symmetry, and the x-coordinate of the vertex. b. Make a table of values that includes the vertex. c. Use this information to graph the function. 7. f(x)  2x2

8. f(x)  x2  4x  4

0; x  0; 0 x

2 1 0

9. f(x)  x2  6x  8

4; x  2; 2

1

2

f (x) 8 2 0 2 8

8; x  3; 3

2 0

2

4

f (x) 16 4

0

4 16

x

f (x )

6

x

0

f (x) 8

f (x )

2

3

4

6

0 1 0

8

f (x )

16 O

x

12 8 4 O –2

O

2

4

x

6x

Determine whether each function has a maximum or a minimum value. Then find the maximum or minimum value of each function. 10. f(x)  6x2

min.; 0 13. f(x)  x2  2x  15

min.; 14 16. f(x)  2x2  4x  3

max.; 1

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

11. f(x)  8x2

max.; 0 14. f(x)  x2  4x  1

max.; 3 17. f(x)  3x2  12x  3

min.; 9

315

12. f(x)  x2  2x

min.; 1

15. f(x)  x2  2x  3

min.; 4

18. f(x)  2x2  4x  1

min.; 1

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 6-1

0; x  0; 0

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

6-2

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Solving Quadratic Equations By Graphing

Use the related graph of each equation to determine its solutions. 1. x2  2x  3  0

2. x2  6x  9  0

f (x )

f (x )

f (x )

f (x )  x 2  6x  9 O

O

3. 3x2  4x  3  0

x

x

f (x )  3x 2  4x  3  2x  3

3, 1

O

3

x

no real solutions

Solve each equation by graphing. If exact roots cannot be found, state the consecutive integers between which the roots are located. 4. x2  6x  5  0

5. x2  2x  4  0

1, 5

6. x2  6x  4  0

no real solutions f (x )

between 0 and 1; between 5 and 6 f (x )

f (x ) O

x

O O

x

x

Use a quadratic equation to find two real numbers that satisfy each situation, or show that no such numbers exist. 7. Their sum is 4, and their product is 0.

8. Their sum is 0, and their product is 36.

x 2  4x  0; 0, 4

x 2  36  0; 6, 6

f (x )

36

f (x )

24 O

12

x –12

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

321

–6

O

6

12 x

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 6-2

f (x ) 

x2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

6-3

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Solving Quadratic Equations by Factoring

Solve each equation by factoring. 1. x2  64 {8, 8}

2. x2  100  0 {10, 10}

3. x2  3x  2  0 {1, 2}

4. x2  4x  3  0 {1, 3}

5. x2  2x  3  0 {1, 3}

6. x2  3x  10  0 {5, 2}

7. x2  6x  5  0 {1, 5}

8. x2  9x  0 {0, 9}

11. x2  5x {0, 5}

12. x2  14x  49  0 {7}

13. x2  6  5x {2, 3}

14. x2  18x  81 {9}

15. x2  4x  21 {3, 7}

16. 2x2  5x  3  0  , 3

3

1



17. 4x2  5x  6  0  , 2





2



18. 3x2  13x  10  0   , 5

Write a quadratic equation with the given roots. Write the equation in the form ax2  bx  c  0, where a, b, and c are integers. 19. 1, 4 x 2  5x  4  0

20. 6, 9 x 2  3x  54  0

21. 2, 5 x 2  7x  10  0

22. 0, 7 x 2  7x  0

1 3

23.   , 3 3x 2 10x  3  0

1 3 2 4

24.   ,  8x 2  2x  3  0

25. Find two consecutive integers whose product is 272. 16, 17

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

327

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 6-3

10. x2  6x  8  0 {2, 4}

9. x2  6x  0 {0, 6}

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

6-4

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Completing the Square

Solve each equation by using the Square Root Property. 1. x2  8x  16  1 3, 5

2. x2  4x  4  1 1, 3

3. x2  12x  36  25 1, 11

4. 4x2  4x  1  9 1, 2

2 

5. x2  4x  4  2 2 

7. x2  6x  9  7 3 

7 

6. x2  2x  1  5 1 

5 

8. x2  16x  64  15 8 

15 

Find the value of c that makes each trinomial a perfect square. Then write the trinomial as a perfect square. 9. x2  10x  c 25; (x  5)2

11. x2  24x  c 144; (x  12)2

81





9 2

13. x2  9x  c  ; x  

10. x2  14x  c 49; (x  7)2

25



1



5 2

12. x2  5x  c  ; x  





1 2

14. x2  x  c  ; x  

15. x2  13x  36  0 4, 9

16. x2  3x  0 0, 3

17. x2  x  6  0 2, 3

18. x2  4x  13  0 2 

1

19. 2x2  7x  4  0 4, 

3  33  2

17 

1

20. 3x2  2x  1  0  , 1

 1  13 2

21. x2  3x  6  0 

22. x2  x  3  0 

23. x2  11 i  11

24. x2  2x  4  0 1  i 3 

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

333

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 6-4

Solve each equation by completing the square.

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

6-5

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice The Quadratic Formula and the Discriminant

Complete parts ac for each quadratic equation. a. Find the value of the discriminant. b. Describe the number and type of roots. c. Find the exact solutions by using the Quadratic Formula. 1. x2  8x  16  0

2. x2  11x  26  0

225; 2 rational roots; 2, 13

0; 1 rational root; 4 3. 3x2  2x  0

4. 20x2  7x  3  0

3 1 289; 2 rational roots;   ,

2 4; 2 rational roots; 0,  5. 5x2  6  0

6. x2  6  0

30  120; 2 irrational roots;  

24; 2 irrational roots; 6 

5

7. x2  8x  13  0

8. 5x2  x  1  0

1  21  21; 2 irrational roots; 

12; 2 irrational roots; 4  3  9. x2  2x  17  0

10

10. x2  49  0

72; 2 irrational roots; 1  32  11. x2  x  1  0

196; 2 complex roots; 7i 12. 2x2  3x  2

1  i 3  3; 2 complex roots; 

 3  i 7 7; 2 complex roots; 

2

4

Solve each equation by using the method of your choice. Find exact solutions. 13. x2  64 8

14. x2  30  0 30 

15. x2  x  30 5, 6

16. 16x2  24x  27  0  ,  

9

17. x2  4x  11  0 2 

15 

 7  17 4  1  i5 24. 2x2  2x  3  0  2

22. 2x2  7x  4  0 

25. PARACHUTING Ignoring wind resistance, the distance d(t) in feet that a parachutist falls in t seconds can be estimated using the formula d(t)  16t2. If a parachutist jumps from an airplane and falls for 1100 feet before opening her parachute, how many seconds pass before she opens the parachute? about 8.3 s ©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

339

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 6-5

5  3  2

21. 2x2  10x  11  0 

1i 4

33 

20. 3x2  36  0 2i 3 

19. x2  25  0 5i

23. 8x2  1  4x 

18. x2  8x  17  0 4 

3

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

6-6

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice

Write each quadratic function in vertex form, if not already in that form. Then identify the vertex, axis of symmetry, and direction of opening. 1. y  (x  2)2

y  (x   0; (2, 0); x  2; up 2)2

2. y  x2  4

y  (x   4; (0, 4); x  0; down 0)2

3. y  x2  6

y  (x  0)2  6; (0, 6); x  0; up

4. y  3(x  5)2

5. y  5x2  9

6. y  (x  2)2  18

7. y  x2  2x  5

8. y  x2  6x  2

9. y  3x2  24x

y  3(x  5)2  0; (5, 0); x  5; down y  (x   6; (1, 6); x  1; up 1)2

y  5(x  0)2  9; (0, 9); x  0; down y  (x   7; (3, 7); x  3; up 3)2

y  (x  2)2  18; (2, 18); x  2; up

y  3(x  4)2  48; (4, 48); x  4; down

Graph each function. 10. y  (x  3)2  1

11. y  (x  1)2  2

y

12. y  (x  4)2  4 y

y O

O

x

1 2

O

y O

x

14. y  3x2  4

13. y    (x  2)2

x

15. y  x2  6x  4

y

y

x O O

x

x

Write an equation for the parabola with the given vertex that passes through the given point. 16. vertex: (4, 36) point: (0, 20)

y  (x  4)2  36

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

17. vertex: (3, 1) point: (2, 0)

y  (x  3)2  1 345

18. vertex: (2, 2) point: (1, 3)

y  (x  2)2  2 Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 6-6

Analyzing Graphs of Quadratic Functions

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

6-7

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Graphing and Solving Quadratic Inequalities

Graph each inequality. 2. y x2  4

y

3. y  x2  2x  5 y

y O

x

O

O

x

x

Use the graph of its related function to write the solutions of each inequality. 4. x2  6x  9 0

5. x2  4x  32 0

y

6. x2  x  20  0

y

y

5 O

2

x

6 O O

2

x

x

3

8  x  4

x  5 or x  4

Solve each inequality algebraically. 7. x2  3x  10  0

{x2  x  5}

9. x2  18x  81 0

{xx  9}

8. x2  2x  35 0

{xx  7 or x 5}

10. x2 36

{x6  x  6}

11. x2  7x  0

12. x2  7x  6  0

13. x2  x  12  0

14. x2  9x  18 0

15. x2  10x  25 0

16. x2  2x  15 0

{xx  0 or x  7} {xx  4 or x  3}

{x6  x  1}

{x6  x  3} {x5  x  3}

all reals 17. x2  3x  0

18. 2x2  2x  4

19. x2  64 16x

20. 9x2  12x  9  0

{xx  3 or x  0}

{xx  2 or x  1}

all reals ©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

351

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 6-7

1. y x2  4x  4

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

7-1

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Polynomial Functions

State the degree and leading coefficient of each polynomial in one variable. If it is not a polynomial in one variable, explain why. 1. a  8 1; 1

2. (2x  1)(4x2  3) 3; 8

3. 5x5  3x3  8 5; 5

4. 18  3y  5y2  y5  7y6 6; 7

5. u3  4u2v2  v4

6. 2r  r2  2

No, this polynomial contains two

No, this is not a polynomial because 1  cannot be written in the form r n, 2 r where n is a nonnegative integer.

variables, u and v.

Find p(1) and p(2) for each function. 7. p(x)  4  3x 7; 2

8. p(x)  3x  x2 2; 10 10. p(x)  2x3  5x  3 0; 3

9. p(x)  2x2  4x  1 7; 1

1 3

11. p(x)  x4  8x2  10 1; 38

2 3

12. p(x)  x2  x  2 3; 2

If p(x)  4x2  3 and r(x)  1  3x, find each value. 13. p(a) 4a2  3

14. r(2a) 1  6a

15. 3r(a) 3  9a

16. 4p(a) 16a2  12

17. p(a2) 4a4  3

18. r(x  2) 7  3x

For each graph, a. describe the end behavior, b. determine whether it represents an odd-degree or an even-degree polynomial function, and c. state the number of real zeroes. 19.

20.

f (x )

O

x

f(x) →  as x → , f(x) →  as x → ; ©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

21.

f (x )

O

x

f(x) →  as x → , f(x) →  as x → ; 377

f (x )

O

x

f(x) →  as x → , f(x) →  as x → ; Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 7-1

1 r

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

7-2

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Graphing Polynomial Functions

Complete each of the following. a. Graph each function by making a table of values. b. Determine consecutive values of x between which each real zero is located. c. Estimate the x-coordinates at which the relative maxima and minima occur. 1. f(x)  x3  3x2  1 f(x)

f (x )

x

19 1 3 O x 0 1 1 1 2 3 3 1 4 17 zeros between 1 and 0, 0 and 1, and 2 and 3; rel. max. at x  0, rel. min. at x  2 x

f(x)

3

4. f(x)  2x3  3x2  2

f (x )

7 2 2 O 1 3 0 2 1 25 zero between 1 and 0; rel. max. at x  2, rel. min. at x  1

x

x

6. f(x)  0.5x4  4x2  4 f (x )

x

61 2 6 O x 1 3 0 2 1 3 2 6 3 61 zeros between 2 and 1, and 1 and 2; rel. max. at x  0, at Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

f(x)

f (x )

8.5 2 4 O x 1 0.5 0 4 1 0.5 2 4 3 8.5 zeros between 1 and 2, 2 and 3, 1 and 2, and 2 and 3; rel. max.

3

©

f (x )

1

5. f(x)  x4  2x2  2 f(x)

f(x)

3 0 2 O x 1 1 2 6 3 29 zero between 1 and 0; rel. min. at x  1, rel. max. at x  0

3

x

f (x )

17 2 1 O x 1 3 0 1 1 1 2 3 3 19 zeros between 2 and 1, 0 and 1, and 1 and 2; rel. max. at x  1, rel. min. at x  1

2

3. f(x)  2x3  9x2 12x  2

f(x)

3

383

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 7-2

x

2. f(x)  x3  3x  1

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

7-3

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Solving Equations Using Quadratic Techniques

Write each expression in quadratic form, if possible. 1. 5x4  2x2  8 5(x 2)2  2(x 2)  8

2. 3y8  4y2  3 not possible

3. 100a6  a3 100(a3)2  a3

4. x8  4x4  9 (x 4)2  4(x 4)  9

5. 12x4  7x2 12(x 2)2  7(x 2)

6. 6b5  3b3  1 not possible

7. 15v6  8v3  9 15(v 3) 2  8(v 3)  9

8. a9  5a5  7a a[(a4)2  5(a4)  7]

Solve each equation. 10. x3  3x2 0, 3

11. t4  3t3  40t2  0 0, 5, 8

12. b3  8b2  16b  0 0, 4

13. m4  4 2 ,

14. w3  6w  0 0,

2 , i2 , i2 

6 , 6 

15. m4  18m2  81 3, 3

16. x5  81x  0 0, 3, 3, 3i, 3i

17. h4  10h2  9 1, 1, 3, 3

18. a4  9a2  20  0 2, 2,

19. y4  7y2  12  0

20. v4  12v2  35  0

21. x5  7x3  6x  0

22. c 3  7c 3  12  0

23. z  5z  6 4, 9

24. x  30x  200  0 100, 400

2, 2, 3 , 3  0, 1, 1, 6 , 6 

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

5 , 5 

5 , 5 , 7 , 7  2 

1 

64, 27

389

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 7-3

9. a3  9a2  14a  0 0, 7, 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

7-4

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice The Remainder and Factor Theorems

Use synthetic substitution to find f(2) and f(1) for each function. 1. f(x)  x2  6x  5 21, 0

2. f(x)  x2  x  1 3, 3

3. f(x)  x2  2x  2 2, 1

4. f(x)  x3  2x2  5 21, 6

5. f(x)  x3  x2  2x  3 3, 3

6. f(x)  x3  6x2  x  4 30, 0

7. f(x)  x3  3x2  x  2 4, 7

8. f(x)  x3  5x2  x  6 8, 1

9. f(x)  x4  2x2  9 15, 6 11. f(x)  x5  7x3  4x  10

22, 20

10. f(x)  x4  3x3  2x2  2x  6 2, 14 12. f(x)  x6  2x5  x4  x3  9x2  20

32, 26

Given a polynomial and one of its factors, find the remaining factors of the polynomial. Some factors may not be binomials. 14. x3  x2  5x  3; x  1

x  1, x  2 15. x3  3x2  4x  12; x  3

x  1, x  3 16. x3  6x2  11x  6; x  3

x  2, x  2 17. x3  2x2  33x  90; x  5

x  1, x  2 18. x3  6x2  32; x  4

x  3, x  6 19. x3  x2  10x  8; x  2

x  4, x  2 20. x3  19x  30; x  2

x  1, x  4 21. 2x3  x2  2x  1; x  1

x  5, x  3 22. 2x3  x2  5x  2; x  2

2x  1, x  1 23. 3x3  4x2  5x  2; 3x  1

x  1, 2x  1 24. 3x3  x2  x  2; 3x  2

x  1, x  2

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

Lesson 7-4

13. x3  2x2  x  2; x  1

x2  x  1

395

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

7-5

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Roots and Zeros

Solve each equation. State the number and type of roots. 1. 5x  12  0

2. x2  4x  40  0

12 5

; 1 real

2  6i; 2 imaginary

3. x5  4x3  0

4. x4  625  0

0, 0, 0, 2i, 2i; 3 real, 2 imaginary 5. 4x2  4x  1  0

5i, 5i, 5i, 5i; 4 imaginary 6. x5  81x  0

1  2   ; 2 real

0, 3, 3, 3i, 3i; 3 real, 2 imaginary

State the possible number of positive real zeros, negative real zeros, and imaginary zeros of each function. 7. g(x)  3x3  4x2  17x  6

8. h(x)  4x3  12x2  x  3

2 or 0; 1; 2 or 0

2 or 0; 1; 2 or 0

9. f(x)  x3  8x2  2x  4

10. p(x)  x3  x2  4x  6

3 or 1; 0; 2 or 0

3 or 1; 0; 2 or 0

11. q(x)  x4  7x2  3x  9

12. f(x)  x4  x3  5x2  6x  1

1; 1; 2

2 or 0; 2 or 0; 4 or 2 or 0

Find all the zeros of each function. 13. h(x)  x3  5x2  5x  3

14. g(x)  x3  6x2  13x  10

3, 1  2 , 1  2  15. h(x)  x3  4x2  x  6

2, 2  i, 2  i 16. q(x)  x3  3x2  6x  8

1, 2, 3

2, 1, 4

17. g(x)  x4  3x3  5x2  3x  4

18. f(x)  x4  21x2  80

4, 4, 5 , 5 

1, 1, 1, 4

Write a polynomial function of least degree with integral coefficients that has the given zeros. 19. 3, 5, 1

20. 3i



7x 2

 7x  15

22. 1, 3 , 3 

21. 5  i

f(x) 

x2

 10x  26

x4



©

f(x)  x 3  x 2  3x  3 24. 1, 1, i 6 

23. i, 5i

f(x) 

f(x)  x 2  9

Lesson 7-5

f(x) 

x3

26x 2

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

 25

f(x)  x 4  5x 2  6 401

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

7-6

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Rational Zero Theorem

1. n(x)  x2  5x  3

2. h(x)  x2  2x  5

1, 3

1, 5

3. w(x)  x2  5x  12

4. f(x)  2x2  5x  3

1 2

1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 12 5. q(x)  6x3  x2  x  2

1 6

Lesson 7-6

List all of the possible rational zeros of each function.

1 3

1 2

3 2

, , 1, 3 6. g(x)  9x4  3x3  3x2  x  27

2 3

1 9

, , , , 1, 2

1 3

, , 1, 3, 9, 27

Find all of the rational zeros of each function. 7. f(x)  x3  2x2  5x  4  0

8. g(x)  x3  3x2  4x  12

2, 2, 3

1 9. p(x)  x3  x2  x  1

10. z(x)  x3  4x2  6x  4

1

2

11. h(x)  x3  x2  4x  4

12. g(x)  3x3  9x2  10x  8

1

4

13. g(x)  2x3  7x2  7x  12

14. h(x)  2x3  5x2  4x  3

3 2

1 2

4, 1,  15. p(x)  3x3  5x2  14x  4  0

1, , 3 16. q(x)  3x3  2x2  27x  18

1 3

2 3

 17. q(x)  3x3  7x2  4

 18. f(x)  x4  2x3  13x2  14x  24

2 3

, 1, 2 19. p(x)  x4  5x3  9x2  25x  70

3, 1, 2, 4 20. n(x)  16x4  32x3  13x2  29x  6

1 3 4 4

2, 7

1, , , 2

Find all of the zeros of each function. 21. f(x)  x3  5x2  11x  15

22. q(x)  x3  10x2  18x  4

2, 4  14 , 4  14 

3, 1  2i, 1  2i 23. m(x)  6x4  17x3  8x2  8x  3

24. g(x)  x4  4x3  5x2  4x  4

1 3 1  5 ,   1  5 , ,  3 2 ©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

2, 2, i, i 407

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

7-7

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Operations on Functions

f

Find ( f  g)(x), (f  g)(x), (f g)(x), and  (x) for each f(x) and g(x). g 1. f(x)  x  5 2x  1; 9; g(x)  x  4

x 2  x  20;

3x  1 2x  3

3 2

g(x)  2x  3 , x 

x5 , x 4 x4

3. f(x)  x2 x 2  x  4; x2  x  4;

0;

3x3  5 x

3x3  5 x

4. f(x)  3x2 , x 0; , x

x2

g(x)  4  x 4x 2  x3;  , x 4

3x3 5

5 x

g(x)   15x, x 0; , x 0

For each set of ordered pairs, find f  g and g  f if they exist. 5. f  {(0, 0), (4, 2)} g  {(0, 4), (2, 0), (5, 0)}

6. f  {(0, 3), (1, 2), (2, 2)} g  {(3, 1), (2, 0)}

7. f  {(4, 3), (1, 1), (2, 2)} g  {(1, 4), (2, 1), (3, 1)}

8. f  {(6, 6), (3, 3), (1, 3)} g  {(3, 6), (3, 6), (6, 3)}

{(0, 2), (2, 0), (5, 0)}; {(0, 4), (4, 0)}

{(3, 2), (2, 3)}; {(0, 1), (1, 0), (2, 0)}

{(3, 6), (3, 6), (6, 3)}; {(6, 3), (3, 6), (1, 6)}

{(1, 3), (2, 1), (3, 1)}; {(4, 1), (1, 4), (2, 1)} Find [g  h](x) and [h  g](x). 9. g(x)  2x 2x  4; 2x  2 h(x)  x  2

10. g(x)  3x 12x  3; 12x  1 h(x)  4x  1

11. g(x)  x  6 x; x h(x)  x  6

12. g(x)  x  3 x 2  3; x 2  6x  9 h(x)  x2

13. g(x)  5x 5x 2  5x  5; h(x)  x2  x  1 25x 2  5x  1

14. g(x)  x  2 2x 2  1; 2x 2  8x  5 h(x)  2x2  3

If f(x)  3x, g(x)  x  4, and h(x)  x2  1, find each value. 15. f[ g(1)] 15

16. g[h(0)] 3

17. g[f(1)] 1

18. h[f(5)] 224

19. g[h(3)] 12

20. h[f(10)] 899

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

413

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 7-7

3;

2. f(x)  3x  1 5x  2; x  4; 6x 2  7x 

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

7-8

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Inverse Functions and Relations

Find the inverse of each relation. 1. {(3, 1), (4, 3), (8, 3)}

2. {(7, 1), (0, 5), (5, 1)}

{(1, 7), (5, 0), (1, 5)}

{(1, 3), (3, 4), (3, 8)} 3. {(10, 2), (7, 6), (4, 2), (4, 0)}

4. {(0, 9), (5, 3), (6, 6), (8, 3)}

5. {(4, 12), (0, 7), (9, 1), (10, 5)}

6. {(4, 1), (4, 3), (0, 8), (8, 9)}

{(2, 10), (6, 7), (2, 4), (0, 4)} {(9, 0), (3, 5), (6, 6), (3, 8)} {(12, 4), (7, 0), (1, 9), (5, 10)}

{(1, 4), (3, 4), (8, 0), (9, 8)}

Find the inverse of each function. Then graph the function and its inverse. 8. f(x)  3x

9. f(x)  x  2

1 f 1(x)  x 3

x4 y

f 1(x)  x  2

f (x )

f (x )

x

O

x

O

x

O

1 4

10. g(x)  2x  1

x1 2

g1(x)  

12. y  x  2

3 2

h1(x)  4x

g (x )

O

2 3

11. h(x)  x

y  x  3

h (x )

x

O

y

x

x

O

Determine whether each pair of functions are inverse functions. 13. f(x)  x  1 no g(x)  1  x 16. f(x)  2x yes 1 g(x)   x 2

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

14. f(x)  2x  3 yes 1 g(x)   (x  3) 2

17. h(x)  6x  2 no 1 g(x)   x  3 6

419

15. f(x)  5x  5 yes 1 5

g(x)   x  1 18. f(x)  8x  10 yes 1 8

5 4

g(x)   x  

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 7-8

7. y  4

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

7-9

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Square Root Functions and Inequalities

Graph each function. State the domain and range of each function. 1. y  2x 

2. y  3x 

y

3. y  2x

y

x

x

O

x

O

D: x 0, R: y 0

4. y   x3

D: x 0, R: y 0

5. y   2x  5

y

6. y   x42

y

y

x

O O

D: x 0, R: y 0

x

O

x

D: x 3, R: y 0

D: x 2.5, R: y 0

D: x 4, R: y 2

Graph each inequality. 7. y  4x 

8. y   x1

y

O

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

9. y   4x  3

y

x

y

x

O

425

O

x

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 7-9

O

y

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

8-1

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Midpoint and Distance Formulas

Find the midpoint of each line segment with endpoints at the given coordinates. 1. (4, 1), (4, 1) (0, 0)

2. (1, 4), (5, 2) (2, 3)

3. (3, 4), (5, 4) (4, 4)

4. (6, 2), (2, 1) 4, 

1 

1





3

5. (3, 9), (2, 3)  , 3

6. (3, 5), (3, 8) 3,  

7. (3, 2), (5, 0) (1, 1)

8. (3, 4), (5, 2) (4, 1)



5

9. (5, 9), (5, 4) 0,  





5



11





10. (11, 14), (0, 4)   , 9

9

11. (3, 6), (8, 3)   ,  



12. (0, 10), (2, 5)

1, 5 

Find the distance between each pair of points with the given coordinates. 13. (4, 12), (1, 0) 13 units

14. (7, 7), (5, 2) 15 units

15. (1, 4), (1, 4) 2 units

16. (11, 11), (8, 15) 5 units

17. (1, 6), (7, 2) 10 units

18. (3, 5), (3, 4) 9 units

19. (2, 3), (3, 5)

5  units

21. (5, 5), (3, 10) 17 units

23. (6, 2), (1, 3)

74  units

25. (0, 3), (4, 1) 42  units

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

20. (4, 3), (1, 7) 5 units

22. (3, 9), (2, 3) 13 units

24. (4, 1), (2, 4)

61  units

26. (5, 6), (2, 0)

85  units

457

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 8-1



NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

8-2

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Parabolas

Write each equation in standard form. 1. y  x2  2x  2

2. y  x2  2x  4

y  [x  (1)]2  1

3. y  x2  4x  1

y  (x  1)2  3

y  [x  (2)]2  (3)

Identify the coordinates of the vertex and focus, the equations of the axis of symmetry and directrix, and the direction of opening of the parabola with the given equation. Then find the length of the latus rectum and graph the parabola. 5. x  (y  2)2  3

y

6. y  (x  3)2  4

y

y

x

O

O

x

O

x

vertex: (2, 0);



vertex: (3, 2);





vertex: (3, 4);







1 focus: 2,  ;

1 focus: 3  ,2;

3 focus: 3, 3  ;

axis of symmetry: x  2; 1 directrix: y    ;

axis of symmetry: y  2; 3 directrix: x  2  ;

axis of symmetry: x  3; 1 directrix: y  4  ;

opens up; latus rectum: 1 unit

opens right; latus rectum: 1 unit

opens down; latus rectum: 1 unit

Write an equation for each parabola described below. Then draw the graph. 7. vertex (0, 0),



1 focus 0,   12 y  3x 2

8. vertex (5, 1),





5 focus 5,  4



Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

x  2(y 

y

1

y

x

x

O

©

7 8 3)2

directrix x  

y  (x  5)2  1

y O

9. vertex (1, 3),

463

O

x

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 8-2

4. y  (x  2)2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

8-3

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Circles

Write an equation for the circle that satisfies each set of conditions. 1. center (0, 5), radius 1 unit

2. center (5, 12), radius 8 units

3. center (4, 0), radius 2 units

4. center (2, 2), radius 3 units

5. center (4, 4), radius 4 units

6. center (6, 4), radius 5 units

x 2  (y  5)2  1

(x  5)2  (y  12)2  64

(x  4)2  y 2  4

(x  2)2  (y  2)2  9

(x  4)2  (y  4)2  16

(x  6)2  (y  4)2  25

7. endpoints of a diameter at (12, 0) and (12, 0) x 2  y 2  144 8. endpoints of a diameter at (4, 0) and (4, 6) (x  4)2  (y  3)2  9 9. center at (7, 3), passes through the origin (x  7)2  (y  3)2  58 10. center at (4, 4), passes through (4, 1) (x  4)2  (y  4)2  9 11. center at (6, 5), tangent to y-axis (x  6)2  (y  5)2  36 12. center at (5, 1), tangent to x-axis (x  5)2  (y  1)2  1 Find the center and radius of the circle with the given equation. Then graph the circle. 14. (x  1)2  (y  2)2  4

(0, 0), 3 units

(1, 2), 2 units

y

(5, 8), 7 units O

(0, 2), 6 units

x 6

12

8 4

8

12

x

18. x2  y2  4y  32  0

y

y

6 O

O

x

17. (x  5)2  (y  8)2  49

(0, 3), 9 units

–6

y

O

x

16. x2  (y  3)2  81

–12

(1, 0), 4 units

y

O

12

15. (x  1)2  y2  16

Lesson 8-3

13. x2  y2  9

x

y

4

–4 –8

–8

–4

O

4

8x

–4

–6 –12

–8

–12

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

469

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

8-4

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Ellipses

Write an equation for each ellipse. 1.

2.

y

3.

(0, 5) y

(0, 2)

(0, 5) y

(0, 3) (–4, 2)

(4, 2)

(–3, 0) (3, 0) x

O

O

x

O

x (0, –1)

(0, –2)

(0, –3)

(0, –5)

y2 x2 1

(y  2)2 x2 1 9

y2 x2 1

Write an equation for the ellipse that satisfies each set of conditions.

y2 x2 1 7. major axis 12 units long and parallel to x-axis, minor axis 4 units long, center at (0, 0)

y2 x2 1

5. endpoints of major axis at (2, 6) and (8, 6), endpoints of minor axis at (5, 4) and (5, 8)

6. endpoints of major axis at (7, 3) and (7, 9), endpoints of minor axis at (5, 6) and (9, 6)

8. endpoints of major axis at (6, 0) and (6, 0), foci at ( , 0) 32, 0) and (32

9. endpoints of major axis at (0, 12) and (0, 12), foci at (0,  23 ) and (0,  23 )

(x  5)2 (y  6)2 1 9 4

y2 x2 1

(y  6)2 (x  7)2 1 9 4

y2 x2 1

Find the coordinates of the center and foci and the lengths of the major and minor axes for the ellipse with the given equation. Then graph the ellipse. y2 100

x2 81

x2 81

10.     1

(0, 0); (0, 19  ); 20; 18 8

y2 9

y

8

©

–4

O

x2 25

12.     1

(0, 0); (62 , 0); 18; 6

4 –8

y2 49

11.     1

(0, 0), (0, 26  ); 14; 10

y

8 4

4 4

8x

–8

–4

O

4

8x

–8

–4

O

–4

–4

–4

–8

–8

–8

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

475

y

4

8x

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 8-4

4. endpoints of major axis at (0, 6) and (0, 6), endpoints of minor axis at (3, 0) and (3, 0)

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

8-5

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Hyperbolas

Write an equation for each hyperbola. 1.

8

2.

y

(0,  61 )

(–5, 0) 4 –8

–4

8

(5, 0) O 4

8x

–4 ( 41, 0) (– 41, 0)  –8

–8

4

(0, – 61 )

–4

8

(0, 6) (–2, 0)

O

–4

3.

y

4

8x

–8

–4

4

(2, 0)

O

4

(0, –6)

8x

( 29, 0)

(– 29, 0) –4

–8

y2 x2 1

y

–8

y2 x2 1

y2 x2 1

Write an equation for the hyperbola that satisfies each set of conditions.

x2

y2

4. vertices (4, 0) and (4, 0), conjugate axis of length 8     1

y2

x2

y2

x2

5. vertices (0, 6) and (0, 6), conjugate axis of length 14     1 6. vertices (0, 3) and (0, 3), conjugate axis of length 10     1

x2

y2

7. vertices (2, 0) and (2, 0), conjugate axis of length 4     1

x2

y2

y2

x2

8. vertices (3, 0) and (3, 0), foci (5, 0)     1 9. vertices (0, 2) and (0, 2), foci (0, 3)     1

(x  3)2 9

(y  2)2 4

10. vertices (0, 2) and (6, 2), foci (3  13 , 2)     1 Find the coordinates of the vertices and foci and the equations of the asymptotes for the hyperbola with the given equation. Then graph the hyperbola. y2 36

y2 49

x2 9

x2 16

12.     1

y2 1

13.     1

(3, 0); (35 , 0);

(0, 7); (0, 58  );

(4, 0); (17 , 0);

y  2x

7 y   x

1 y   x

y

8

y

8

4 O

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

x

–8

–4

O

4 4

8x

–8

–4

O

–4

–4

–8

–8

481

y

4

8x

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 8-5

x2 9

11.     1

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

8-6

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice

Write each equation in standard form. State whether the graph of the equation is a parabola, circle, ellipse, or hyperbola. Then graph the equation. 1. x2  25y2  25 hyperbola 2. 9x2  4y2  36 ellipse

y2

x2

1 4

y2

x2

1

3. x2  y2  16  0 circle

x 2  y 2  16

y

y

y

2 –8

–4

O

4

O

8x

x

O

x

–2 –4

4. x2  8x  y2  9 circle

5. x2  2x  15  y parabola 6. 100x2  25y2  400

(x  4)2  y 2  25 8

y  (x  1)2  16

y

–4

O

–4

ellipse

y

y –8

4 –8

y2 x2 1

O

4

8x

–4 4

8x

–8

–4

–12

–8

–16

O

x

Without writing the equation in standard form, state whether the graph of each equation is a parabola, circle, ellipse, or hyperbola. 7. 9x2  4y2  36 ellipse 9. y  x2  2x parabola

8. x2  y2  25 circle 10. y  2x2  4x  4 parabola

11. 4y2  25x2  100 hyperbola

12. 16x2  y2  16 ellipse

13. 16x2  4y2  64 hyperbola

14. 5x2  5y2  25 circle

15. 25y2  9x2  225 ellipse

16. 36y2  4x2  144 hyperbola

17. y  4x2  36x  144 parabola

18. x2  y2  144  0 circle

19. (x  3)2  ( y  1)2  4 circle

20. 25y2  50y  4x2  75 ellipse

21. x2  6y2  9  0 hyperbola

22. x  y2  5y  6 parabola

23. (x  5)2  y2  10 circle

24. 25x2  10y2  250  0 ellipse

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

487

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 8-6

Conic Sections

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

8-7

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Solving Quadratic Systems

1. y  x  2 (0, 2), (1, 1) 2. y  x  3 (1, 2), y  x2  2 y  2x2 (1.5, 4.5)

3. y  3x (0, 0) x  y2

4. y  x (2 , 2  ), 5. x  5 (5, 0) 2 2 2 2 x  y  4 (2 , 2  ) x  y  25

6. y  7 no solution x2  y2  9

7. y  2x  2 (2, 2),

9. y  2  x (0, 2), (3,

1)

y2  2x

1 , 1

8. x  y  1  0 (1, 2) y2  4x

y  x2  4x  2

10. y  x  1 no solution y  x2

11. y  3x2 (0, 0) y  3x2

12. y  x2  1 (1, 2), y  x2  3 (1, 2)

13. y  4x (1, 4), (1, 4) 4x2  y2  20

14. y  1 (0, 1) 4x2  y2  1

15. 4x2  9y2  36 (3, 0), x2  9y2  9 (3, 0)

16. 3( y  2)2  4(x  3)2  12 17. x2  4y2  4 (2, 0), y  2x  2 (0, 2), (3, 4) x2  y2  4 (2, 0)

18. y2  4x2  4 no y  2x solution

Solve each system of inequalities by graphing. 19. y 3x  2 x2  y2  16

20. y x y 2x2  4

y

21. 4y2  9x2  144 x2  8y2  16

y

8

y

4 O

x

O

x

–8

–4

O

4

8x

–4 –8

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

493

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 8-7

Find the exact solution(s) of each system of equations.

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

9-1

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Multiplying and Dividing Rational Expressions

Simplify each expression.

3x

8y2(y6)3 4y

(x6)3 (x )

6 3.  3 4 x

18 2x  6

x2 x2  4 (x  2)(x  1)

9

6.  

3a2  24a a  8 3a  12a

3m 2n

 7.  2

10(ef)3 8e f

5s2 s 4

80y4 49z v

3  11.  2  21g

q2  2q 6q

3x x 4

w2  6w  7 w3

1

17.   (3x2  3x) 

19.

©

5



Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

q2  4 3q

q2

t2  19t  84 4t  4

2t  2 t  9t  14

t  12

 16.    2

(w  8)(w  7)

c2  2d2  c6  5d

32z 7

14.     2

15.   

x2  5x  4 2x  8

25y5 14z v

12.  5 7   12 5 

x(x  2) 13.    2

w2  5w  24 w1

1

s2 10s

 10.   2 5

1

7g y

n3 mn 2 6

8.    

6e 9.  2   5

3x2 x2

2

 4.  24

5.  

24e3 5f

b

5ab3 25a b

 2.  2 2

Lesson 9-1

21x3y 14x y

 1.  2 2

16a2  40a  25 3a  10a  8

(4a  5)(a  4) 4a  5 a  8a  16

 18.    2 2

20.

a2  b2  4a  ab  2a

519

ab 

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

9-2

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Adding and Subtracting Rational Expressions

Find the LCM of each set of polynomials. 1. 12c, 6c2d 12c 2d

2. 18a3bc2, 24b2c2 72a 3b 2c 2

3. 2x  6, x  3 2(x  3)

4. 5a, a  1 5a(a  1)

5. t2  25, t  5 (t  5)(t  5)

6. x2  3x  4, x  1 (x  4)(x  1)

Simplify each expression. 5 5x  3y y

2c  5

2c  7 3

9.   4 

12 5y

2 12z  2y 5yz

3 w3

2 w 9

m mn

m nm

13.    

3w  7

15.     2

2m

17.    

1 x  2x  1

x2  x  1 x x1

19.     2

n n3

2n  2 n  2n  3

21.    2

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

5 2  5m 2 n

7 4gh

3 4h

7h  3g

5 3b  d

2 15bd  6b  2d 3bd

14.    

3t 2x

5  3t 5 x2

4z z4

z  4 5z 2  4z  16 z1

16.    

18.    

2x  1 x5

4 x  3x  10

2x 2  5x  2

20.     2

3 y  y  12

2 y  6y  8

22.    2 2

n2 

©

2 m n

12.    2 

a6

3 2a

5 4p q

10.     2

11. 2   

2 a2

13

3 8p q

8.   2 2  

Lesson 9-2

3 x

7.    

y  12 

525

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

9-3

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Graphing Rational Functions

Determine the equations of any vertical asymptotes and the values of x for any holes in the graph of each rational function. 10 x  13x  36

3 x  2x  8

2. f(x)   2

x  12 x  10x  24

4. f(x)   2

x2  8x  12 x2

6. f(x)  

1. f(x)   2

asymptotes: x  4, x  2

asymptotes: x  4, x  9

x1 x  4x  3

3. f(x)   2

asymptote: x  2; hole: x  12

asymptote: x  3; hole: x  1

x2  x  12 x3

5. f(x)  

hole: x  2

hole: x  3

Graph each rational function. 4 x

10 x

8. f(x)   f (x )

9. f(x)   f (x )

f (x )

2 O

x

2 x1

O

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

O

12. f(x)  

f (x )

x

O

531

x

x2  4 x2

11. f(x)  

f (x )

©

x

x x2

10. f(x)  

O

2

f (x )

x

O

x

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 9-3

3 x

7. f(x)  

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

9-4

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Direct, Joint, and Inverse Variation

State whether each equation represents a direct, joint, or inverse variation. Then name the constant of variation. 4 q

1

1 2

1. c  12m direct; 12

2. p   inverse; 4

3. A   bh joint; 

4. rw  15 inverse; 15

5. y  2rst joint; 2

6. f  5280m direct; 5280

7. y  0.2s direct; 0.2

8. vz  25 inverse; 25

9. t  16rh joint; 16

8 w

10. R   inverse; 8

a b

1

1 3

11.    direct; 

12. C  2 r direct; 2

Find each value. 13. If y varies directly as x and y  35 when x  7, find y when x  11. 55 14. If y varies directly as x and y  360 when x  180, find y when x  270. 540 15. If y varies directly as x and y  540 when x  10, find x when y  1080. 20 16. If y varies directly as x and y  12 when x  72, find x when y  9. 54 17. If y varies jointly as x and z and y  18 when x  2 and z  3, find y when x  5 and z  6. 90

19. If y varies jointly as x and z and y  120 when x  4 and z  6, find y when x  3 and z  2. 30 20. If y varies inversely as x and y  2 when x  2, find y when x  1. 4 21. If y varies inversely as x and y  6 when x  5, find y when x  10. 3 22. If y varies inversely as x and y  3 when x  14, find x when y  6. 7 23. If y varies inversely as x and y  27 when x  2, find x when y  9. 6 24. If y varies directly as x and y  15 when x  5, find x when y  36. 12

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

537

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 9-4

18. If y varies jointly as x and z and y  16 when x  4 and z  2, find y when x  1 and z  7. 14

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE______________ PERIOD _____

9-5

Skills Practice Classes of Functions

Identify the type of function represented by each graph. 1.

2.

y

O

3.

y

O

x

y

x

O

constant

direct variation

x

quadratic

Match each graph with an equation below. 1 x1

A. y  |x  1| 4.

B. y  

B

y

C. y   1x

5.

C

y

D. y  x  1 6.

A

y

O O

x

x

O

x

Identify the type of function represented by each equation. Then graph the equation. 8. y  2x

inverse variation or rational

9. y  3x

greatest integer y

y

O

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

direct variation

x

O

543

y

x

O

x

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 9-5

2 x

7. y  

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

9-6

____________ PERIOD _____

Skills Practice Solving Rational Equations and Inequalities

x x1

1 2

2. 2     

6 2

9 3x

2 z

3.    1

2 d1

4. 3  z   1, 2

s3 5

1 d2

3 2

12 y

7.    3

x2 x4

8.    y  7 3, 4

x1 x  10

10.     0 k 0

5 v

12. n    n 3 or 0 n 3

3 k

9.    8

3 v

11. 2    0 v 4

1 2m

3 m

5 2

13.      0 m 1

9x  7 x2

15 x

2q q1

5 n 9

2 n3

19.      4 2

x8 2x  2

x 2x  2

2e e 4

1 e2

2x  3 x1

21.     

2 e2

23.      6 2

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

3 n

1 2x

12 n

3

2 x

14.    1 0 x 

b2 b1

16.   4   4

17. 2     5

1 n3

4 3k

3b  2 b1

15.     9 3

5 2q

8 s

6.    5, 8

5.    5

2x  3 x1

1 12 3

4 n

1.    1

Lesson 9-6

Solve each equation or inequality. Check your solutions.

4 z

8z  8 2 z2

18. 8     

1 w2

1 w2

4 w 4

20.     

2

12s  19 s  7s  12

3 s3

5 s4

22.   2 2

8 t 9

4 t3

2 t3

24.   5 2

549

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

10-1 Skills Practice Exponential Functions Sketch the graph of each function. Then state the function’s domain and range.

 12 

1. y  3(2)x

2. y  2 

O

y

O

x

domain: all real numbers; range: all positive numbers

x

domain: all real numbers; range: all positive numbers

Determine whether each function represents exponential growth or decay.

 109 

x

3. y  3(6) x growth

4. y  2 

5. y  10x decay

6. y  2(2.5) x growth

decay

Write an exponential function whose graph passes through the given points.

 13  1 x 9. (0, 3) and (1, 6) y  3   2

7. (0, 1) and (1, 3) y  

x

11. (0, 0.1) and (1, 0.5) y  0.1(5)x

8. (0, 4) and (1, 12) y  4(3)x 10. (0, 5) and (1, 15) y  5(3)x 12. (0, 0.2) and (1, 1.6) y  0.2(8)x

Simplify each expression. 13. (33)3 27

14 14. (x2)7 x

15. 523  543 563

16. x3 x x 2

Solve each equation or inequality. Check your solution. 17. 3x  9 x  2 1 7

18. 22x  3  32 1

1 2

4 3

19. 49x  x   

20. 43x  2  16 

21. 32x  5  27x 5

22. 27x  32x  3 3

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

575

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 10-1

y

x

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

10-2 Skills Practice Logarithms and Logarithmic Functions Write each equation in logarithmic form. 1. 23  8 log2 8  3

2. 32  9 log3 9  2

1

1

 13 

3. 82   log8   2 64 64

4. 

2

1 9

1 9

  log1   2 3

Write each equation in exponential form.

1 2

1 

7. log9 3   9 2  3

6. log4 64  3 43  64

1 25

8. log5   2 52   1 25

Lesson 10-2

5. log3 243  5 35  243

Evaluate each expression.

1 2

10. log9 3 

9. log5 25 2

1 3

12. log125 5 

11. log10 1000 3 1 64

1 625

13. log4  3

14. log5  4

15. log8 83 3

16. log27   

1 3

1 3

Solve each equation or inequality. Check your solutions. 17. log3 x  5 243

18. log2 x  3 8

19. log4 y  0 0  y  1

20. log14 x  3 

1 4

1 64

1 2

21. log2 n  2 n  

22. logb 3   9

23. log6 (4x  12)  2 6

24. log2 (4x  4)  5 x  9

25. log3 (x  2)  log3 (3x) 1

26. log6 (3y  5) log6 (2y  3) y 8

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

581

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE______________ PERIOD _____

10-3 Skills Practice Properties of Logarithms Use log2 3  1.5850 and log2 5  2.3219 to approximate the value of each expression. 1. log2 25 4.6438

2. log2 27 4.755 5 3

3 5

3. log2  0.7369

4. log2  0.7369

5. log2 15 3.9069

6. log2 45 5.4919

7. log2 75 6.2288

8. log2 0.6 0.7369

1 3

9 5

9. log2  1.5850

10. log2  0.8481

Solve each equation. Check your solutions. 12. 3 log7 4  2 log7 b 8

13. log4 5  log4 x  log4 60 12

14. log6 2c  log6 8  log6 80 5

15. log5 y  log5 8  log5 1 8

16. log2 q  log2 3  log2 7 21

17. log9 4  2 log9 5  log9 w 100

18. 3 log8 2  log8 4  log8 b 2

19. log10 x  log10 (3x  5)  log10 2 2

20. log4 x  log4 (2x  3)  log4 2 2

21. log3 d  log3 3  3 9

22. log10 y  log10 (2  y)  0 1

1 25

Lesson 10-3

11. log10 27  3 log10 x 3

23. log2 s  2 log2 5  0 

24. log2 (x  4)  log2 (x  3)  3 4

25. log4 (n  1)  log4 (n  2)  1 3

26. log5 10  log5 12  3 log5 2  log5 a 15

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

587

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE______________ PERIOD _____

10-4 Skills Practice Common Logarithms Use a calculator to evaluate each expression to four decimal places. 1. log 6 0.7782

2. log 15 1.1761

3. log 1.1 0.0414

4. log 0.3 0.5229

Use the formula pH  log[H] to find the pH of each substance given its concentration of hydrogen ions. 5. gastric juices: [H]  1.0  101 mole per liter 1.0 6. tomato juice: [H]  7.94  105 mole per liter 4.1 7. blood: [H]  3.98  108 mole per liter 7.4 8. toothpaste: [H]  1.26  1010 mole per liter 9.9 Solve each equation or inequality. Round to four decimal places. 9. 3x  243 {x | x  5}

1 4

 

1 2

10. 16v  v v   



12. 7y  15 1.3917

13. 53b  106 0.9659

14. 45k  37 0.5209

15. 127p  120 0.2752

16. 92m  27 0.75

17. 3r  5  4.1 6.2843

18. 8 y  4  15 {y | y  2.6977}

19. 7.6 d  3  57.2 1.0048

20. 0.5t  8  16.3 3.9732

21. 42x  84 1.0888

22. 5x

2

2

 1

Lesson 10-4

11. 8 p  50 1.8813

10 0.6563

Express each logarithm in terms of common logarithms. Then approximate its value to four decimal places.

log

7

10 23. log3 7  ; 1.7712

log10 3

log 35 log10 2

10 25. log2 35  ; 5.1293

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

log 66 log10 5

10 24. log5 66  ; 2.6032

log 10 log10 6

10 26. log6 10  ; 1.2851

593

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE______________ PERIOD _____

10-5 Skills Practice Base e and Natural Logarithms Use a calculator to evaluate each expression to four decimal places. 1. e3 20.0855

2. e2 0.1353

3. ln 2 0.6931

4. ln 0.09 2.4079

Write an equivalent exponential or logarithmic equation. 5. ex  3 x  ln 3

6. e4  8x 4  ln 8x

7. ln 15  x e x  15

8. ln x  0.6931 x  e0.6931

Evaluate each expression. 9. eln 3 3 11. ln e2.5 2.5

10. eln 2x 2x

12. ln e y y

Solve each equation or inequality. 14. ex  3.2 {x | x  1.1632}

15. 2ex  1  11 1.7918

16. 5ex  3  18 1.0986

17. e3x  30 1.1337

18. e4x 10 {x | x  0.5756}

19. e5x  4 34 {x | x  0.6802}

20. 1  2e2x  19 1.1513

21. ln 3x  2 2.4630

22. ln 8x  3 2.5107

23. ln (x  2)  2 9.3891

24. ln (x  3)  1 0.2817

25. ln (x  3)  4 51.5982

26. ln x  ln 2x  2 1.9221

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

599

Lesson 10-5

13. ex  5 {x | x  1.6094}

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE______________ PERIOD _____

10-6 Skills Practice Solve each problem. 1. FISHING In an over-fished area, the catch of a certain fish is decreasing at an average rate of 8% per year. If this decline persists, how long will it take for the catch to reach half of the amount before the decline? about 8.3 yr

2. INVESTING Alex invests $2000 in an account that has a 6% annual rate of growth. To the nearest year, when will the investment be worth $3600? 10 yr

3. POPULATION A current census shows that the population of a city is 3.5 million. Using the formula P  aert, find the expected population of the city in 30 years if the growth rate r of the population is 1.5% per year, a represents the current population in millions, and t represents the time in years. about 5.5 million

4. POPULATION The population P in thousands of a city can be modeled by the equation P  80e0.015t, where t is the time in years. In how many years will the population of the city be 120,000? about 27 yr

5. BACTERIA How many days will it take a culture of bacteria to increase from 2000 to 50,000 if the growth rate per day is 93.2%? about 4.9 days

6. NUCLEAR POWER The element plutonium-239 is highly radioactive. Nuclear reactors can produce and also use this element. The heat that plutonium-239 emits has helped to power equipment on the moon. If the half-life of plutonium-239 is 24,360 years, what is the value of k for this element? about 0.00002845

7. DEPRECIATION A Global Positioning Satellite (GPS) system uses satellite information to locate ground position. Abu’s surveying firm bought a GPS system for $12,500. The GPS depreciated by a fixed rate of 6% and is now worth $8600. How long ago did Abu buy the GPS system? about 6.0 yr

8. BIOLOGY In a laboratory, an organism grows from 100 to 250 in 8 hours. What is the hourly growth rate in the growth formula y  a(1  r) t ? about 12.13%

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

605

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 10-6

Exponential Growth and Decay

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

11-1 Skills Practice Arithmetic Sequences 1. 7, 11, 15, … 19, 23, 27, 31

2. 10, 5, 0, … 5, 10, 15, 20

3. 101, 202, 303, … 404, 505, 606, 707

4. 15, 7, 1, … 9, 17, 25, 33

5. 67, 60, 53, …

6. 12, 15, 18, …

46, 39, 32, 25

21, 24, 27, 30

Find the first five terms of each arithmetic sequence described. 7. a1  6, d  9 6, 15, 24, 33, 42 9. a1  12, d  5 12, 7, 2, 3, 8 11. a1  64, d  11

64, 53, 42, 31, 20

8. a1  27, d  4 27, 31, 35, 39, 43 10. a1  93, d  15 93, 78, 63, 48, 33 12. a1  47, d  20

47, 67, 87, 107, 127

Find the indicated term of each arithmetic sequence. 13. a1  2, d  6, n  12 68

14. a1  18, d  2, n  8 32

15. a1  23, d  5, n  23 133

16. a1  15, d  1, n  25 9

17. a31 for 34, 38, 42, … 154

18. a42 for 27, 30, 33, … 150

Complete the statement for each arithmetic sequence. 19. 55 is the ? th term of 4, 7, 10, … . 18

20. 163 is the ? th term of 5, 2, 9, … . 25

Write an equation for the nth term of each arithmetic sequence. 21. 4, 7, 10, 13, … an  3n  1

22. 1, 1, 3, 5, … an  2n  3

23. 1, 3, 7, 11, … an  4n  5

24. 7, 2, 3, 8, … an  5n  12

Find the arithmetic means in each sequence. 25. 6, ? , ? , ? , 38 14, 22, 30

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

26. 63, ? , ? , ? , 147 84, 105, 126

633

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 11-1

Find the next four terms of each arithmetic sequence.

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

11-2 Skills Practice Arithmetic Series 1. a1  1, an  19, n  10 100

2. a1  5, an  13, n  7 28

3. a1  12, an  23, n  8 44

4. a1  7, n  11, an  67 407

5. a1  5, n  10, an  32 185

6. a1  4, n  10, an  22 130

7. a1  8, d  5, n  12 426

8. a1  1, d  3, n  15 330

9. a1  100, d  7, an  37 685

10. a1  9, d  4, an  27 90

11. d  2, n  26, an  42 442

12. d  12, n  11, an  52 88

Find the sum of each arithmetic series. 13. 1  4  7  10  …  43 330

14. 5  8  11  14  …  32 185

15. 3  5  7  9  …  19 99

16. 2  (5)  (8)  …  (20) 77

5

17.  (2n  3) 15 n1

10

19.  (4n  1) 225 n2

18

18.  (10  3n) 693 n1

12

20.  (4  3n) 172 n5

Find the first three terms of each arithmetic series described. 21. a1  4, an  31, Sn  175 4, 7, 10

22. a1  3, an  41, Sn  228 3, 1, 5

23. n  10, an  41, Sn  230 5, 9, 13

24. n  19, an  85, Sn  760 5, 0, 5

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

639

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 11-2

Find Sn for each arithmetic series described.

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

11-3 Skills Practice Geometric Sequences Find the next two terms of each geometric sequence. 3 2

3

3

1. 1, 2, 4, … 8, 16

2. 6, 3,  , …  , 

3. 5, 15, 45, … 135, 405

4. 729, 243, 81 , … 27, 9

5. 1536, 384, 96, … 24, 6

6. 64, 160, 400, … 1000, 2500

Find the first five terms of each geometric sequence described. 7. a1  6, r  2

8. a1  27, r  3

27, 81, 243, 729, 2187

6, 12, 24, 48, 96 9. a1  15, r  1

10. a1  3, r  4

15, 15, 15, 15, 15 1 2

1 3

11. a1  1, r  

12. a1  216, r   

1

8

216, 72, 24, 8, 

1,  ,  ,  , 

Find the indicated term of each geometric sequence. 13. a1  5, r  2, n  6 160

14. a1  18, r  3, n  6 4374

15. a1  3, r  2, n  5 48

16. a1  20, r  2, n  9 5120

3

17. a8 for 12, 6, 3, …  

80 80 3 9

80

18. a7 for 80,  ,  , … 

Write an equation for the nth term of each geometric sequence. 19. 3, 9, 27, … an  3n

20. 1, 3, 9, … an  1(3)n  1

21. 2, 6, 18, … an  2(3)n  1

22. 5, 10, 20, … an  5(2)n  1

Find the geometric means in each sequence. 23. 4, ? , ? , ? , 64 8, 16, 32 ©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

24. 1, ? , ? , ? , 81 3, 9, 27

645

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 11-3

1 1 1

3, 12, 48, 192, 768

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

11-4 Skills Practice Geometric Series Find Sn for each geometric series described. 1. a1  2, a5  162, r  3 242

2. a1  4, a6  12,500, r  5 15,624

3. a1  1, a8  1, r  1 0

4. a1  4, an  256, r  2 172

5. a1  1, an  729, r  3 547

6. a1  2, r  4, n  5 410

7. a1  8, r  2, n  4 120

8. a1  3, r  2, n  12 4095 3 8

1 93 2

1 2

21

9. a1  8, r  3, n  5 968

10. a1  6, an   , r   

127

12. a1  2, r    , n  6 

1 2

11. a1  8, r   , n  7 

Find the sum of each geometric series. 13. 4  8  16  … to 5 terms 124

14. 1  3  9  … to 6 terms 364

15. 3  6  12  … to 5 terms 93

16. 15  30  60  … to 7 terms 645

4

5

17.  3n  1 40

18.  (2)n  1 11

4

n1

 13 

19.  

n1

Lesson 11-4

n1

9

40 

20.  2(3)n  1 9842

n1

n1

Find the indicated term for each geometric series described. 21. Sn  1275, an  640, r  2; a1 5 1 2

23. Sn  99, n  5, r    ; a1 144

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

22. Sn  40, an  54, r  3; a1 2 24. Sn  39,360, n  8, r  3; a1 12

651

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

11-5 Skills Practice Infinite Geometric Series Find the sum of each infinite geometric series, if it exists. 2 25 5

1 2

1. a1  1, r   2

2. a1  5, r    

3. a1  8, r  2 does not exist

4. a1  6, r   12

1 2

1 2

5. 4  2  1    … 8

6. 540  180  60  20  … 405

7. 5  10  20  … does not exist

8. 336  84  21  … 268.8

9. 125  25  5  … 156.25

3 4

9 4

27 4

11.       … does not exist

25

13. 5  2  0.8  … 

1 n1 2

 

15.  10  n1

n1

n1

 52 

17.  15 

1 3

1

1 27

14. 9  6  4  … 27



n1

 13 

16.  6   n1

25

1 9

12.       … 



20

81

1 9

10. 9  1    … 

n1

n1

 43  13 

18.    

9 

2

Write each repeating decimal as a fraction.

4

8

20. 0.8  

3

22. 0.6 7  

6

24. 0.3 7 5  

641

26. 0.1 7 1  

21. 0.2 7  

23. 0.5 4  

25. 0.6 4 1  

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

67

125

Lesson 11-5

19. 0.4  

57

657

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

11-6 Skills Practice Recursion and Special Sequences 1. a1  4, an  1  an  7

2. a1  2, an  1  an  3

2, 1, 4, 7, 10

4, 11, 18, 25, 32 3. a1  5, an  1  2an

4. a1  4, an  1  6  an

4, 10, 4, 10, 4

5, 10, 20, 40, 80 5. a1  1, an  1  an  n

6. a1  1, an  1  n  an

1, 2, 0, 3, 1

1, 2, 4, 7, 11 7. a1  6, an  1  an  n  1

6, 4, 1, 3, 8

9. a1  3, an  1  2an  7

3, 1, 9, 25, 57

11. a1  0, a2  1, an  1  an  an  1

8. a1  8, an  1  an  n  2

8, 5, 1, 4, 10

10. a1  4, an  1  2an  5

4, 13, 21, 47, 89

12. a1  1, a2  1, an  1  an  an  1

1, 1, 0, 1, 1

0, 1, 1, 2, 3 13. a1  3, a2  5, an  1  4an  an  1

3, 5, 23, 97, 411

Lesson 11-6

Find the first five terms of each sequence.

14. a1  3, a2  2, an  1  an  1  an

3, 2, 5, 7, 12

Find the first three iterates of each function for the given initial value. 15. f(x)  2x  1, x0  3 5, 9, 17

16. f(x)  5x  3, x0  2 7, 32, 157

17. f(x)  3x  4, x0  1 1, 7, 25

18. f(x)  4x  7, x0  5 13, 45, 173

19. f(x)  x  3, x0  10 13, 10, 13

20. f(x)  3x  6, x0  6 12, 42, 120

21. f(x)  3x  4, x0  2 2, 10, 26

22. f(x)  6x  5, x0  1 1, 1, 1

23. f(x)  7x  1, x0  4

24. f(x)  x2  3x, x0  5

27, 188, 1315

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

10, 70, 4690 663

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE______________ PERIOD _____

11-7 Skills Practice The Binomial Theorem Evaluate each expression. 1. 8! 40,320

2. 10! 3,628,800

3. 12! 479,001,600

4.  210

15! 13!

6! 3!

6.  45

9! 3!6!

8.  15,504

7.  84

10! 2!8!

Lesson 11-7

5.  120

20! 15!5!

Expand each power. 9. (x  y)3

x 3  3x 2y  3xy 2  y 3 11. (g  h)4

g 4  4g 3h  6g 2h 2  4gh 3  h4 13. (r  4)3

r 3  12r 2  48r  64 15. ( y  7)3

y 3  21y 2  147y  343 17. (x  1)4

x 4  4x 3  6x 2  4x  1 19. (c  4d)3

c 3  12c 2d  48cd 2  64d 3

10. (a  b)5

a 5  5a 4b  10a 3b 2  10a 2b 3  5ab4  b 5 12. (m  1)4

m4  4m 3  6m 2  4m  1 14. (a  5)4

a 4  20a 3  150a 2  500a  625 16. (d  2)5

d 5  10d 4  40d 3  80d 2  80d  32 18. (2a  b)4

16a 4  32a 3b  24a 2b 2  8ab3  b4 20. (2a  3)3

8a3  36a 2  54a  27

Find the indicated term of each expansion. 21. fourth term of (m  n)10 120m7n 3

22. seventh term of (x  y)8 28x 2y 6

23. third term of (b  6)5 360b 3

24. sixth term of (s  2)9 4032s4

25. fifth term of (2a  3)6 4860a 2

26. second term of (3x  y)7 5103x 6y

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669

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

11-8 Skills Practice Proof and Mathematical Induction Prove that each statement is true for all positive integers. 1. 1  3  5  …  (2n  1)  n2

Step 1: When n  1, 2n  1  2(1)  1  1  12. So, the equation is true for n  1. Step 2: Assume that 1  3  5  …  (2k  1)  k 2 for some positive integer k. Step 3: Show that the given equation is true for n  k  1. 1  3  5  …  (2k  1)  [2(k  1)  1]  k 2  [2(k  1)  1]  k 2  2k  1  (k  1)2 So, 1  3  5  …  (2n  1)  n 2 for all positive integers n. Step 1: When n  1, 2n  2(1)  2  12  1. So, the equation is true for n  1. Step 2: Assume that 2  4  6  …  2k  k 2  k for some positive integer k. Step 3: Show that the given equation is true for n  k  1. 2  4  6  ….  2k  2(k  1)  k 2  k  2(k  1)  (k 2  2k  1)  (k  1)  (k  1)2  (k  1) So, 2  4  6  …  2n  n 2  n for all positive integers n. 3. 6n  1 is divisible by 5.

Step 1: When n  1, 6n  1  61  1  5. So, the statement is true for n  1. Step 2: Assume that 6k  1 is divisible by 5 for some positive integer k. Then there is a whole number r such that 6k  1  5r. Step 3: Show that the statement is true for n  k  1. 6k  1  5r 6k  5r  1 6(6k )  6(5r  1) 6k  1  30r  6 6k  1  1  30r  5 6k  1  1  5(6r  1) Since r is a whole number, 6r  1 is a whole number, and 6k  1  1 is divisible by 5. The statement is true for n  k  1. So, 6n  1 is divisible by 5 for all positive integers n. Find a counterexample for each statement. 4. 3n  3n is divisible by 6.

n(n  1)(2n  1) 6

5. 1  4  8  …  2n  

Sample answer: n  2 ©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

Sample answer: n  3 675

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 11-8

2. 2  4  6  …  2n  n2  n

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

12-1 Skills Practice The Counting Principle State whether the events are independent or dependent. 1. finishing in first, second, or third place in a ten-person race dependent 2. choosing a pizza size and a topping for the pizza independent

4. The 232 members of the freshman class all vote by secret ballot for the class representative to the Student Senate. independent

Solve each problem. 5. A surveying firm plans to buy a color printer for printing its maps. It has narrowed its choice to one of three models. Each of the models is available with either 32 megabytes of random access memory (RAM), 64 megabytes of RAM, or 128 megabytes of RAM. From how many combinations of models and RAM does the firm have to choose? 9 6. How many arrangements of three letters can be formed from the letters of the word MATH if any letter will not be used more than once? 24 7. Allan is playing the role of Oliver in his school’s production of Oliver Twist. The wardrobe crew has presented Allan with 5 pairs of pants and 4 shirts that he can wear. How many possible costumes consisting of a pair of pants and a shirt does Allan have to choose from? 20 8. The 10-member steering committee that is preparing a study of the public transportation needs of its town will select a chairperson, vice-chairperson, and secretary from the committee. No person can serve in more than one position. In how many ways can the three positions be filled? 720 9. Jeanine has decided to buy a pickup truck. Her choices include either a V-6 engine or a V-8 engine, a standard cab or an extended cab, and 2-wheel drive or 4-wheel drive. How many possible models does she have to choose from? 8 10. A mail-order company that sells gardening tools offers rakes in two different lengths. Customers can also choose either a wooden, plastic, or fiberglass handle for the rake. How many different kinds of rakes can a customer buy? 6 11. A Mexican restaurant offers chicken, beef, or vegetarian fajitas wrapped with either corn or flour tortillas, and topped with either mild, medium, or hot salsa. How many different choices of fajitas does a customer have? 18

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

701

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 12-1

3. Seventy-five raffle tickets are placed in a jar. Three tickets are then selected, one after the other, without replacing a ticket after it is chosen. dependent

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

12-2 Skills Practice Permutations and Combinations Evaluate each expression. 1. P(6, 3) 120

2. P(8, 2) 56

3. P(2, 1) 2

4. P(3, 2) 6

5. P(10, 4) 5040

6. P(5, 5) 120

7. C(2, 2) 1

8. C(5, 3) 10

9. C(4, 1) 4

10. C(8, 7) 8

11. C(3, 2) 3

12. C(7, 4) 35

Determine whether each situation involves a permutation or a combination. Then find the number of possibilities. 13. seating 8 students in 8 seats in the front row of the school auditorium

14. introducing the 5 starting players on the Woodsville High School basketball team at the beginning of the next basketball game

permutation; 120 15. checking out 3 library books from a list of 8 books for a research paper

combination; 56 16. choosing 2 movies to rent from 5 movies

combination; 10 17. the first-, second-, and third-place finishers in a race with 10 contestants

permutation; 720 18. electing 4 candidates to a municipal planning board from a field of 7 candidates

combination; 35 19. choosing 2 vegetables from a menu that offers 6 vegetable choices

combination; 15 20. an arrangement of the letters in the word rhombus

permutation; 5040 21. selecting 2 of 8 choices of orange juice at a store

combination; 28 22. placing a red rose bush, a yellow rose bush, a white rose bush, and a pink rose bush in a row in a planter permutation; 24 23. selecting 2 of 9 kittens at an animal rescue shelter

combination; 36 24. an arrangement of the letters in the word isosceles

permutation; 30,240 ©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

707

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 12-2

permutation; 40,320

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

12-3 Skills Practice Probability Ahmed is posting 2 photographs on his website. He has narrowed his choices to 4 landscape photographs and 3 portraits. If he chooses the two photographs at random, find the probability of each selection.

1 7

2 7

1. P(2 portrait) 

2. P(2 landscape) 

4 7

3. P(1 of each) 

The Carubas have a collection of 28 video movies, including 12 westerns and 16 science fiction. Elise selects 3 of the movies at random to bring to a sleep-over at her friend’s house. Find the probability of each selection.

55 819

20 117

5. P(3 science fiction) 

40 91

88 273

6. P(1 western and 2 science fiction) 

7. P(2 westerns and 1 science fiction) 

8. P(3 comedy) 0

9. P(2 science fiction and 2 westerns) 0

For Exercises 10–13, use the chart that shows the class and gender statistics for the students taking an Algebra 1 or Algebra 2 class at La Mesa High School. If a student taking Algebra 1 or Algebra 2 is selected at random, find each probability. Express as decimals rounded to the nearest thousandth. 10. P(sophomore/female) 0.208 11. P(junior/male) 0.143

Class/Gender Freshman/Male

Number 95

Freshman/Female

101

Sophomore/Male

154

Sophomore/Female

145

Junior/Male

100

Junior/Female

102

12. P(freshman/male) 0.136 13. P(freshman/female) 0.145

Find the odds of an event occurring, given the probability of the event. 14.  5:3

5 8

15.  2:5

2 7

16.  3:2

1 10

18.  5:1

5 6

19.  5:7

17.  1:9

3 5

5 12

Find the probability of an event occurring, given the odds of the event.

2 3 1 23. 1:9  10 20. 2:1 

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

8 17 2 24. 2:7  9

4 5 5 25. 5:9  14

21. 8:9 

22. 4:1 

713

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 12-3

4. P(3 westerns) 

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

12-4 Skills Practice Multiplying Probabilities A die is rolled twice. Find each probability.

1 36

1 36

25 36

1. P(5, then 6) 

2. P(no 2s) 

5 6

4. P(any number, then not 5) 

3. P(two 1s) 

5 36

25 36

5. P(4, then not 6) 

6. P(not 1, then not 2) 

A board game uses a set of 6 different cards. Each card displays one of the following figures: a star, a square, a circle, a diamond, a rectangle, or a pentagon. The cards are placed face down, and a player chooses two cards. Find each probability.

1 30

7. P(circle, then star), if no replacement occurs 

1 36

8. P(diamond, then square), if replacement occurs 

25 36

9. P(2 polygons), if replacement occurs 

2 3

10. P(2 polygons), if no replacement occurs  11. P(circle, then hexagon), if no replacement occurs 0

Determine whether the events are independent or dependent. Then find each probability. 12. A mixed box of herbal teabags contains 2 lemon teabags, 3 orange-mango teabags, 3 chamomile teabags, and 1 apricot-ginger teabag. Kevin chooses 2 teabags at random to bring to work with him. What is the probability that he first chooses a lemon teabag and 1 then a chamomile teabag? 

dependent; 12

Type of Oil

Domestic Imported

Pure

2

5

Cold Pressed

4

8

First Cold Pressed

7

15

dependent; 820

For Exercises 14 and 15, two thirds of the area of the spinner earns you 50 points. Suppose you spin the spinner twice. 14. Sketch a tree diagram showing all of the possibilities. Use it to find the probability of spinning 50 points, then 100 points. 2

50

100

9

15. What is the probability that you get 100 points on each spin? 1

9

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

719

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 12-4

13. The chart shows the selection of olive oils that Hasha finds in a specialty foods catalog. If she randomly selects one type of oil, then randomly selects another, different oil, what is the probability that both selections are domestic, 21 first cold pressed oils? 

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

12-5 Skills Practice Adding Probabilities Eli has 10 baseball cards of 10 different players in his pocket. Three players are pitchers, 5 are outfielders, and 2 are catchers. If Eli randomly selects a card to trade, find each probability.

4 5

1 2

1. P(pitcher or outfielder) 

2. P(pitcher or catcher) 

7 10

3. P(outfielder or catcher) 

A die is rolled. Find each probability.

1 3

2 3

4. P(5 or 6) 

5. P(at least a 3) 

1 2

6. P(less than 4) 

Determine whether the events are mutually exclusive or inclusive. Then find the probability.

1 3

7. A die is rolled. What is the probability of rolling a 3 or a 4? mutually exclusive; 

1 2

8. A die is rolled. What is the probability of rolling an even number or a 4? inclusive;  9. A card is drawn from a standard deck of cards. What is the probability of drawing a king 2 or a queen? mutually exclusive; 

13

10. A card is drawn from a standard deck of cards. What is the probability of drawing a jack 4 or a heart? inclusive; 

13

11. The sophomore class is selling Mother’s Day plants to raise money. Susan’s prize for being the top seller of plants is a choice of a book, a CD, or a video. She can choose from 6 books, 3 CDs, and 5 videos. What is the probability that Susan selects a book or a CD?

9 14

mutually exclusive;  A spinner numbered 110 is spun. Find each probability.

7 10

12. P(less than 5 or even) 

13. P(even or odd) 1

4 5

14. P(prime or even) 

Two cards are drawn from a standard deck of cards. Find each probability.

55 221

25 51

16. P(both aces or both red) 

11 221

17. P(both 2s or both less than 5) 

188 663

18. P(both black or both less than 5) 

For Exercises 19 and 20, use the Venn diagram that shows the number of participants in two different kinds of aerobic exercise classes that are offered at a health club. Determine each probability if a person is selected at random from the participants.

49 62

Step Aerobics 22

13 Jazzercise 27

19. P(step aerobics or jazzercise, but not both) 

13 62

20. P(step aerobics and jazzercise)  ©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

725

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 12-5

15. P(both red or both black) 

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

12-6 Skills Practice Find the variance and standard deviation of each set of data to the nearest tenth. 1. {32, 41, 35, 35, 46, 42} 23.6, 4.9 2. {13, 62, 77, 24, 38, 19, 88} 763.8, 27.6 3. {89, 99, 42, 16, 42, 71, 16} 959.1, 31.0 4. {450, 400, 625, 225, 300, 750, 650, 625} 30,537.1; 174.7 5. {17, 23, 65, 94, 33, 33, 33, 8, 57, 75, 44, 12, 11, 68, 39} 630.7, 25.1 6. {7.2, 3.1, 3.8, 9.5, 8.3, 8.4} 5.8, 2.4 7. {1.5, 2.5, 3.5, 4.5, 4.5, 5.5, 6.5, 7.5} 3.5, 1.9 For Exercises 8 and 9, use the table that shows the profit in billions of dollars reported by U.S. manufacturers for the first quarter of the years from 1997 through 2001. Year

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

Seasonally-Adjusted $61.4 $75.6 $60.9 $78.5 $45.3 Profit ($ billions) Source: U. S. Census Bureau

8. Find the mean and median of the data to the nearest tenth. $64.3 billion, $61.4 billion 9. Which measure of central tendency best represents the data? Explain.

The median is more representative because the value 45.3 is not close to the other data points, and it lowers the mean. For Exercises 10 and 11, use the table that shows the percent of fourth grade students reading at or above the proficiency level in a nationally-administered reading assessment. Year

1992 1994 1998 2000

Percent at or above 29% 30% 31% 32% proficiency level Source: National Center for Education Statistics

10. Find the mean, median, and standard deviation of the data to the nearest tenth.

30.5%, 30.5%, 1.1 11. What do the statistics from Exercise 11 tell you about the data?

Sample answer: Since the median and mean are equal and the standard deviation is small, the percent of students reading at or above the proficiency level has not varied much from 1992 to 2000. ©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

731

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 12-6

Statistical Measures

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

12-7 Skills Practice The Normal Distribution Determine whether the data in each table appear to be positively skewed, negatively skewed, or normally distributed. 2. Speeches Given Political Candidates

0–4

3

0–5

1

5–9

4

6–11

2

10–14

7

12–17

3

15–19

5

18–23

8

20–23

2

24–29

8

normally distributed

negatively skewed

For Exercises 3 and 4, use the frequency table that shows the average number of days patients spent on the surgical ward of a hospital last year.

4. Do the data appear to be positively skewed, negatively skewed, or normally distributed? Explain.

Positively skewed; the histogram is high at the left and has a tail to the right.

Frequency

3. Make a histogram of the data.

Patient Stays

20 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0–3

Days

Number of Patients

0–3

5

4–7

18

8–11

11

12–15

9

16

6

4–7 8–11 12–15 16

Days

DELIVERY For Exercises 5–7, use the following information. The time it takes a bicycle courier to deliver a parcel to his farthest customer is normally distributed with a mean of 40 minutes and a standard deviation of 4 minutes. 5. About what percent of the courier’s trips to this customer take between 36 and 44 minutes?

68% 6. About what percent of the courier’s trips to this customer take between 40 and 48 minutes?

47.5% 7. About what percent of the courier’s trips to this customer take less than 32 minutes? 2.5%

TESTING For Exercises 8–10, use the following information. The average time it takes sophomores to complete a math test is normally distributed with a mean of 63.3 minutes and a standard deviation of 12.3 minutes. 8. About what percent of the sophomores take more than 75.6 minutes to complete the test?

16% 9. About what percent of the sophomores take between 51 and 63.3 minutes? 34% 10. About what percent of the sophomores take less than 63.3 minutes to complete the test?

50% ©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

737

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 12-7

1. Miles Run Track Team Members

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

12-8 Skills Practice Binomial Experiments Find each probability if a coin is tossed 4 times.

1 16

1 16

1. P(4 heads) 

2. P(0 heads) 

1 4

3 8

3. P(exactly 3 heads) 

4. P(exactly 2 heads) 

5 16

1 4

5. P(exactly 1 head) 

6. P(at least 3 heads) 

Find each probability if a die is rolled 3 times.

5 72

25 72

8. P(exactly two 2s) 

1 216

9. P(exactly three 2s) 

25 27

10. P(at most one 2) 

A town that presents a fireworks display during its July 4 celebration found the 3 probability that a family with two or more children will watch the fireworks is . 5 If 5 of these families are selected at random, find each probability. 11. P(exactly 3 families watch the fireworks) 12. P(exactly 2 families watch the fireworks)

216  625

144  625

13. P(exactly 5 families watch the fireworks) 14. P(no families watch the fireworks)

243  3125

32  3125

15. P(at least 4 families watch the fireworks) 16. P(at most 1 family watches the fireworks)

272  3125

1053  3125

One section of a standardized English language test has 10 true/false questions. Find each probability when a student guesses at all ten questions.

45 1024

17. P(exactly 8 correct) 

63 256

19. P(exactly half correct) 

1 1024

21. P(0 correct) 

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

45 1024

18. P(exactly 2 correct) 

1 1024

20. P(all 10 correct) 

7 128

22. P(at least 8 correct) 

743

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 12-8

7. P(exactly one 2) 

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

12-9 Skills Practice Sampling and Error Determine whether each situation would produce a random sample. Write yes or no and explain your answer. 1. calling households at 3:30 P.M. on Tuesday to determine a political candidate’s support

No; since most registered voters are likely to be at work at this time, this sample would not be representative of all registered voters. 2. polling customers as they exit a sporting goods store about their attitudes about exercise

No; these customers are likely to value exercise more than those who do not shop at sporting goods stores, who are not represented in this survey. 3. recording the number of sit-ups performed by 15-year old girls in the high schools of a large school district to determine the fitness of all high-school girls in the district

No; 15-year old girls may not have the same abilities as 18-year old seniors, for example. 4. selecting two of a city’s 20 apartment buildings for a survey to determine the desire of apartment dwellers in the city to own a home No; the residents of the two

buildings selected might, for example, have nicer apartments or be in a nicer area of town, and thus would not well represent the desires of people in other buildings.

teachers from all levels was selected at random, the sample should well represent the population of teachers in the district. 6. For seven consecutive days, one hour each in the morning, afternoon, and evening, every tenth customer who enters a mall is asked to choose her or his favorite store. Yes;

because the sample is chosen over the course of a whole week, during hours when different consumer groups shop, and because the selection is systematic, the sample should well represent the general population that shops at the mall stores. Find the margin of sampling error to the nearest percent. 7. p  85%, n  100 about 7%

8. p  78%, n  100 about 8%

9. p  15%, n  100 about 7%

10. p  37%, n  500 about 4%

11. p  12%, n  500 about 3%

12. p  93%, n  500 about 2%

13. p  23%, n  1000 about 3%

14. p  56%, n  1000 about 3%

15. HEALTH In a recent poll of cigarette smokers, 67% of those surveyed said they had tried to quit smoking within the last year. The margin of error was 3%. About how many people were surveyed? about 983 ©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

749

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 12-9

5. In a large school district, the superintendent of schools interviews two teachers at random from each school to determine whether teachers in the district think students are assigned too much or too little homework. Yes; since a cross section of

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

13-1 Skills Practice Right Triangle Trigonometry Find the values of the six trigonometric functions for angle . 2.



3. 5

2

6



8

3

13

13 3 13 13 2 cos   , 13 3 13  tan   , csc   , 2 3 2 13  sec   , cot    3 2

5 12 13 13 5 13 tan   , csc   , 12 5 13 12 sec   , cot    12 5

4 3 5 5 4 5 tan   , csc   , 3 4 5 3 sec   , cot    3 4

sin   , cos   ,



sin   , cos   ,

sin   ,

Write an equation involving sin, cos, or tan that can be used to find x. Then solve the equation. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. 4.

5.

6. 60

8

x

x

5

10 22

30

x

8 x

7.

cos 60  , x  10 8.

60

x 10

5 x

tan 30  , x  13.9

5

9.

x 8

tan 22  , x  4.0 x 2

5 4

x

x 5

sin 60  , x  4.3

5 8

cos x  , x  51

4 2

tan x  , x  63

Solve ABC by using the given measurements. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. 10. A  72, c  10

a  9.5, b  3.1, B  18

a  41.2, c  43.9, A  70

13. A  58, b  12

14. b  4, c  9

15. a  7, b  5

b  1.6, c  9.1, B  10 a  8.1, A  64, B  26

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

b

11. B  20, b  15

12. A  80, a  9

A

C

c

a

B

a  19.2, c  22.6, B  32 c  8.6, A  54, B  36

777

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 13-1

1.

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

13-2 Skills Practice Angles and Angle Measure Draw an angle with the given measure in standard position. 2. 810

3. 390

y

y

x

O

y

x

O

5. 50

4. 495

6. 420 y

y

x

O

x

O

O

y

x

O

x

Rewrite each degree measure in radians and each radian measure in degrees.

13 18

7. 130 

8. 720 4

7 6

 2

9. 210 

10. 90 

 6

3 2

11. 30 

12. 270 

13.  60

 3

14.  150

5 6

2 3

16.  225

5 4

15.  120 3 4

17.  135

7 6

18.  210

Find one angle with positive measure and one angle with negative measure coterminal with each angle. 19–26. Sample answers are given. 19. 45 405, 315

20. 60 420, 300

21. 370 10, 350

22. 90 270, 450

2 8 3 3

4 3

24.  , 

 13 6 6

11 6

26.  , 

23.  ,  25.  , 

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

5 9 2 2

3 5 4 4

783

 2

3 2

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 13-2

1. 185

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

13-3 Skills Practice Trigonometric Functions of General Angles Find the exact values of the six trigonometric functions of  if the terminal side of  in standard position contains the given point. 1. (5, 12)

2. (3, 4)

5 12 12 sin   , cos   , tan   , 13 13 5 5 13 13 csc   , sec   , cot    12 12 5

4 3 4 5 5 3 5 5 3 csc   , sec   , cot    4 3 4

sin   , cos   , tan   ,

3. (8, 15)

4. (4, 3)

8 15 15 17 17 8 8 17 17 csc   , sec   , cot    15 15 8

3 4 3 5 5 4 5 5 4 csc   , sec   , cot    3 4 3

sin   , cos   , tan   ,

5. (9, 40)

sin   , cos   , tan   ,

6. (1, 2)

25  5

9 40 40 sin   , cos   , tan   , 41 41 9

2,

41 40

5

5 

9 40

41 9

5 

sin   , cos   , tan   1 2

csc   , sec   5 , cot   

csc   , sec   , cot   

2

Sketch each angle. Then find its reference angle. 8. 200 20

y

y

y

x

O

x

O

5  3 3

9.  

O

Lesson 13-3

7. 135 45

x

Find the exact value of each trigonometric function.

1 2

10. sin 150   4

14. tan  1

12. cot 135 1

11. cos 270 0 4 3

3  13. tan (30) 

3 2  3 16. cot () 17. sin   4 2 undefined

1 2

15. cos  

Suppose  is an angle in standard position whose terminal side is in the given quadrant. For each function, find the exact values of the remaining five trigonometric functions of . 4 5

12 5

18. sin   , Quadrant II

3 4 5 3 5 3 sec   , cot    3 4

19. tan   , Quadrant IV

5 4

cos   , tan   , csc   ,

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

5 12 13 13 5 13 sec   , cot    12 5

13 12

sin   , cos   , csc   ,

789

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

13-4 Skills Practice Law of Sines Find the area of ABC to the nearest tenth. 1.

36.9 cm2

B

2.

10.0 ft2

A 7 ft

10 cm

C

125

35

B

A

9 cm

5 ft

C

3. A  35, b  3 ft, c  7 ft 6.0 ft2

4. C  148, a  10 cm, b  7 cm 18.5 cm2

5. C  22, a  14 m, b  8 m 21.0 m2

6. B  93, c  18 mi, a  42 mi 377.5 mi2

Solve each triangle. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. 7. A

8. B

9.

12

B

15 18

C

B

B  93, a  102.1, b  393.8 10. C 10

30

A

121

A

C  150, a  31.5, b  21.2 11.

C

B  29, C  30, c  124.6 12. B

C

109

20

B

B  60, C  90, b  17.3

A

119

C 105

A

37

75 22

B

C  68, a  14.3, b  22.9

70

A

B  65, C  45, c  82.2

Determine whether each triangle has no solution, one solution, or two solutions. Then solve each triangle. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. 13. A  30, a  1, b  4

14. A  30, a  2, b  4 one solution;

15. A  30, a  3, b  4 two solutions;

16. A  38, a  10, b  9 one solution;

17. A  78, a  8, b  5 one solution;

18. A  133, a  9, b  7 one solution;

19. A  127, a  2, b  6 no solution

20. A  109, a  24, b  13 one solution;

no solution

B  42, C  108, c  5.7; B  138, C  12, c  1.2 B  38, C  64, c  7.4

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

B  90, C  60, c  3.5

B  34, C  108, c  15.4 B  35, C  12, c  2.6

B  31, C  40, c  16.4

795

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 13-4

375

212

51

72 C

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

13-5 Skills Practice Law of Cosines Determine whether each triangle should be solved by beginning with the Law of Sines or Law of Cosines. Then solve each triangle. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. 1. B

2. B

7

3.

C

4 34

5

B

9

A 10 18

C

41 3

A

A

cosines; B  23, C  116, a  5.1

4.

B 4

C

sines; A  27, C  119, c  7.9

5.

6.

C

2

cosines; A  143, B  20, C  18

C

4

130

B

4 20

A 3

cosines; A  104, B  47, C  29

A

5

B

cosines; A  41, C  54, b  6.1

7. C  71, a  3, b  4

sines; B  30, a  2.7, c  6.1

8. A  11, C  27, c  50

cosines; A  43, B  66, c  4.1

9. C  35, a  5, b  8

A

sines; B  142, a  21.0, b  67.8

10. B  47, a  20, c  24

cosines; A  37, B  108, c  4.8

cosines; A  55, C  78, b  17.9

11. A  71, C  62, a  20

12. a  5, b  12, c  13

13. A  51, b  7, c  10

14. a  13, A  41, B  75

15. B  125, a  8, b  14

16. a  5, b  6, c  7

sines; B  47, b  15.5, c  18.7

cosines; A  23, B  67, C  90

cosines; B  44, C  85, a  7.8

sines; A  28, C  27, c  7.8

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

sines; C  64, b  19.1, c  17.8

cosines; A  44, B  57, C  78

801

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 13-5

C

85

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

13-6 Skills Practice The given point P is located on the unit circle. Find sin  and cos .

4 5

 35 45 

 153

1. P ,  sin   ,

12 13

12 13





9 41

40 41



2. P ,  sin   , 3. P ,  sin  

5 13

3

cos   

cos   

4. P(0, 1) sin   1,

5. P(1, 0) sin   0,

cos   0

cos   1

9 41

40 41

, cos   

 12

3 



6. P ,  sin  



2

2

1 2

, cos   

Find the exact value of each function.

10. cos 330

2

13. sin 5 0 7 3

16. sin 

1 2 1 11. cos (60)  2

12. sin (390) 

14. cos 3 1

15. sin  1

8. sin 210 

7. cos 45



7 3



1 2

5 2

1 2

17. cos  

2

1 2

9. sin 330 



5 6



18. cos  

2

Determine the period of each function. 19.

4

y 2

O

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10



2

20.

2

y 2

O

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10 x

2

21.

2

y 1 O



2

3

4



1

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

807

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 13-6

Circular Functions

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

13-7 Skills Practice Inverse Trigonometric Functions Write each equation in the form of an inverse function. 1.   cos    cos1 

2. sin b  a sin1 a  b

3. y  tan x x  tan1 y

2  2  4. cos 45   cos1   45 2 2

5. b  sin 150 150  sin1 b

6. tan y   tan1   y

Lesson 13-7

4 5

4 5

Solve each equation by finding the value of x to the nearest degree. 7. x  Cos1 (1) 180

9. Tan1 1  x 45

11. x  Arctan 0 0

8. Sin1 (1)  x 90 3 





10. x  Arcsin   60 2 1 2

12. x  Arccos  60

Find each value. Write angle measures in radians. Round to the nearest hundredth. 2 

3 





13. Sin1  0.79 radians 2

14. Cos1   2.62 radians 2

15. Tan1 3  1.05 radians

16. Arctan   0.52 radians 3



2 





3 



17. Arccos   2.36 radians 2

18. Arcsin 1 1.57 radians

19. sin (Cos1 1) 0

20. sin Sin1  0.5



3 





1 2



21. tan Arcsin  1.73 2

22. cos (Tan1 3) 0.32

23. sin [Arctan (1)] 0.71

24. sin Arccos   2

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill



813



2 

 0.71 Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

14-1 Skills Practice Graphing Trigonometric Functions Find the amplitude, if it exists, and period of each function. Then graph each function. 2. y  4 sin 

y

y

y

2

4

4

1

2

2

O

90 180 270 360

O

90 180 270 360

O

1

2

2

2

4

4

1 2

4. y   tan 

5. y  sin 3

y

y

y 2

4

1

1

2

90 180 270 360

O

90 180 270 360

O

1

1

2

2

2

4

7. y  tan 2

y 4

2

1

2

90 135 180

O

45

90 135 180

O

2

1

2

4

2

4

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

150

y

2

45

90

9. y  4 sin 

4

O

30

1 2

8. y  cos 2

y

90 180 270 360

6. y  csc 3

2

O

©

3. y  2 sec 

839

180 360 540 720

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 14-1

1. y  2 cos 

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

14-2 Skills Practice Translations of Trigonometric Graphs State the amplitude, period, and phase shift for each function. Then graph the function. 2. y  cos (  45)

y

y 2

4

1

1

2

90 180 270 360

O



y

2

O

 2



3. y  tan   

90 180 270 360

O

1

1

2

2

2

4

 2



3 2

2

State the vertical shift, equation of the midline, amplitude, and period for each function. Then graph the function. 4. y  csc   2

5. y  cos   1

y

y

6. y  sec   3 y 6

2 2

4

O

180 360 540 720

1

2

2 O

4

180 360 540 720

1

O

90 180 270 360

2

6

State the vertical shift, amplitude, period, and phase shift of each function. Then graph the function. 7. y  2 cos [3(  45)]  2

8. y  3 sin [2(  90)]  2

y 6

4

4

4

2

2

2

90 180 270 360

2

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

O

  2

y

y

6

O

 4

 43 

9. y  4 cot    

O 2

 2



3 2

2

90 180 270 360 4

2

845

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 14-2

1. y  sin (  90)

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

14-3 Skills Practice Trigonometric Identities Find the value of each expression. 4 5

1. sin , if cos    and 90  180

2. cos , if tan   1 and 180  270

3. sec , if tan   1 and 0   90

4. cos , if tan    and 0   90

1 2

2 

5. tan , if sin     and 180  270 6. cos , if sec   2 and 270  360 2

3 2

9. cos , if cot    and 90  180

11. cot , if csc   2 and 180  270

25 

8. tan , if cos     and 180  270 5

8 17

10. csc , if cos    and 0  90

5 13

12. tan , if sin    and 180  270

Simplify each expression. 13. sin  sec 

14. csc  sin 

15. cot  sec 

16. 

17. tan   cot 

18. csc  tan   tan  sin 

1  sin2  sin   1

20. csc   cot 

sin2   cos2  1  cos

22. 1  

19. 

21.  2 

©

cos  sec 

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

tan2  1  sec 

851

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 14-3

7. cos , if csc   2 and 180  270

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

14-4 Skills Practice Verifying Trigonometric Identities Verify that each of the following is an identity. 1. tan  cos   sin 

2. cot  tan   1

3. csc  cos   cot 

4.   cos 

5. (tan )(1  sin2 )  sin  cos 

6.   cot 

1  sin2  cos 

sin2  1  sin 

cos2  1  sin 

7.   tan2  2

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

Lesson 14-4

csc  sec 

2

8.   1  sin 

857

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

14-5 Skills Practice Sum and Difference of Angles Formulas Find the exact value of each expression. 1. sin 330

2. cos (165)

3. sin (225)

4. cos 135

5. sin (45)

6. cos 210

7. cos (135)

8. sin 75

9. sin (195)

Verify that each of the following is an identity. 10. sin (90  )  cos 

11. sin (180  )  sin 

12. cos (270   )  sin 

13. cos (  90)  sin 



 2



Lesson 14-5

14. sin     cos 

15. cos (  )  cos 

©

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

863

Glencoe Algebra 2

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

14-6 Skills Practice  2

7 25

 2 4 2. sin   , 180  270 5

40 41

4. cos   , 270  360

Find the exact values of sin 2, cos 2, sin , and cos  for each of the following. 1. cos   , 0  90

3. sin   , 90  180

3 5

5. cos   , 90  180

3 7

5 13

6. sin   , 0  90

Find the exact value of each expression by using the half-angle formulas. 1 2

7. cos 22

8. sin 165

 8

10. sin 

9. cos 105

15 8

11. sin 

12. cos 75

Verify that each of the following is an identity. 2 tan  1  tan 

13. sin 2   2

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Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

14. tan   cot   2 csc 2

869

Glencoe Algebra 2

Lesson 14-6

Double-Angle and Half-Angle Formulas

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE

____________ PERIOD _____

14-7 Skills Practice Solving Trigonometric Equations Find all solutions of each equation for the given interval. 2 

2. 2 cos   3 , 90  180

3. tan2   1, 180  360

4. 2 sin   1, 0   

5. sin2   sin   0,    2

6. 2 cos2   cos   0, 0   

Lesson 14-7

1. sin    , 0   360 2

Solve each equation for all values of  if  is measured in radians. 7. 2 cos2   cos   1

9. sin   sin  cos   0

11. 4 cos   1  2 cos 

8. sin2   2 sin   1  0

10. sin2   1

1 2

12. tan  cos   

Solve each equation for all values of  if  is measured in degrees. 13. 2 sin   1  0

14. 2 cos   3 0

15. 2  sin   1  0

16. 2 cos2   1

17. 4 sin2   3

18. cos 2  1

Solve each equation for all values of . 19. 3 cos2   sin2   0

20. sin   sin 2  0

21. 2 sin2   sin   1

22. cos   sec   2

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Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

875

Glencoe Algebra 2