Functions can be described by their key features. Some key features are intervals that describe how the function behaves, and other features like the intercepts, are individual points that carry a specific meaning. The key features of a function help us interpret and understand functions that describe real-world phenomena.
The important characteristics, or key features, of a function or relation, include domain, range, and average rate of change over specific intervals, along with the following:
We can use intervals to describe the behavior of the function, including where the function is increasing, decreasing, or constant, its domain and range, and where the function is positive or negative. When identifying intervals, except in the case of the range, we use the x-values to mark the beginning and end of the behavior.
We can identify some of the key features from a graph using ordered pairs, inequality notation, interval notation, or set-builder notation, as shown:
Key features of a function are useful in helping to sketch the function, as well as to interpret information about the function in a given context. Note that not every function will have each type of key feature.
Consider the function shown in the following graph:
Identify whether the function has a maximum or minimum value and state this value.
State the range of the function.
State the x-intercept(s) of the function.
Determine the largest interval over which the function is increasing.
Sketch a graph that has the following features:
A penguin is tagged with a tracker to record its height above sea level when hunting. The height of the penguin is graphed against time.
Use the key features of the graph to describe the penguin's time spent hunting. Be as detailed as possible.
Use key features to sketch a graph of the following scenario:
A hiker is hiking up a mountain, and their initial elevation is at 0 feet above sea level. As the hiker begins on the trail, they have enough energy to climb their way to the first summit at an increasing pace, but they slow down and eventually take a lunch break on a ridge. The hiker continues their walk up the mountain at a steady rate after lunch and takes a short break at the summit, where they've reached the maximum elevation for the day. The hiker makes their way back down the mountain at a steady pace.
The key features of a function and how to describe them are as follows: