9514 1404 393
Answer:
Step-by-step explanation:
We have to assume you intend everything to the right of the slash (/) to be denominator. Ordinarily, only the first factor would be considered denominator according to the Order of Operations.
ab/cd = (ab/c)d . . . according to the order of operations.
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The degree of the numerator or denominator is essentially the number of factors involving x.
1. The numerator has 3 factors, hence degree 3. The denominator has 2 factors, hence degree 2. The degree of the numerator is 1 more than the degree of the denominator, so the function will have a slant asymptote.
degrees: num/den = 3/2
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2. The numerator has 2 factors, hence degree 2. The denominator has one binomial factor and 3 factors of x, hence degree 4. The degree of the denominator is higher than the degree of the numerator, so the function will have y = 0 as its horizontal asymptote.
degrees: num/den = 2/4 --- y = 0 horizontal asymptote
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3. The numerator has 2 factors, as does the denominator. Hence the degree of each is 2. The horizontal asymptote will be a constant equal to the ratio of the leading coefficients: y = 5/3.
degrees: num/den = 2/2