In this section, you will:
A mound of gravel is in the shape of a cone with the height equal to twice the radius.
The volume is found using a formula from elementary geometry.
We have written the volume
in terms of the radius
However, in some cases, we may start out with the volume and want to find the radius. For example: A customer purchases 100 cubic feet of gravel to construct a cone shape mound with a height twice the radius. What are the radius and height of the new cone? To answer this question, we use the formula
This function is the inverse of the formula for
in terms of
In this section, we will explore the inverses of polynomial and rational functions and in particular the radical functions we encounter in the process.
Two functions
and
are inverse functions if for every coordinate pair in
there exists a corresponding coordinate pair in the inverse function,
In other words, the coordinate pairs of the inverse functions have the input and output interchanged. Only one-to-one functions have inverses. Recall that a one-to-one function has a unique output value for each input value and passes the horizontal line test.
For example, suppose a water runoff collector is built in the shape of a parabolic trough as shown in [link]. We can use the information in the figure to find the surface area of the water in the trough as a function of the depth of the water.
Because it will be helpful to have an equation for the parabolic cross-sectional shape, we will impose a coordinate system at the cross section, with
measured horizontally and
measured vertically, with the origin at the vertex of the parabola. See [link].
From this we find an equation for the parabolic shape. We placed the origin at the vertex of the parabola, so we know the equation will have form
Our equation will need to pass through the point (6, 18), from which we can solve for the stretch factor
Our parabolic cross section has the equation
We are interested in the surface area of the water, so we must determine the width at the top of the water as a function of the water depth. For any depth
the width will be given by
so we need to solve the equation above for
and find the inverse function. However, notice that the original function is not one-to-one, and indeed, given any output there are two inputs that produce the same output, one positive and one negative.
To find an inverse, we can restrict our original function to a limited domain on which it is one-to-one. In this case, it makes sense to restrict ourselves to positive
values. On this domain, we can find an inverse by solving for the input variable:
This is not a function as written. We are limiting ourselves to positive
values, so we eliminate the negative solution, giving us the inverse function we’re looking for.
Because
is the distance from the center of the parabola to either side, the entire width of the water at the top will be
The trough is 3 feet (36 inches) long, so the surface area will then be:
This example illustrates two important points:
Functions involving roots are often called radical functions. While it is not possible to find an inverse of most polynomial functions, some basic polynomials do have inverses. Such functions are called invertible functions, and we use the notation
Warning:
is not the same as the reciprocal of the function
This use of “–1” is reserved to denote inverse functions. To denote the reciprocal of a function
we would need to write
An important relationship between inverse functions is that they “undo” each other. If
is the inverse of a function
then
is the inverse of the function
In other words, whatever the function
does to
undoes it—and vice-versa.
and
Note that the inverse switches the domain and range of the original function.
Two functions,
and
are inverses of one another if for all
in the domain of
and
Given a polynomial function, find the inverse of the function by restricting the domain in such a way that the new function is one-to-one.
with
and
and rename the function
Show that
and
are inverses, for
.
We must show that
and
Therefore,
and
are inverses.
Show that
and
are inverses.
and
Find the inverse of the function
This is a transformation of the basic cubic toolkit function, and based on our knowledge of that function, we know it is one-to-one. Solving for the inverse by solving for
Look at the graph of
and
Notice that one graph is the reflection of the other about the line
This is always the case when graphing a function and its inverse function.
Also, since the method involved interchanging
and
notice corresponding points. If
is on the graph of
then
is on the graph of
Since
is on the graph of
then
is on the graph of
Similarly, since
is on the graph of
then
is on the graph of
See [link].
Find the inverse function of
So far, we have been able to find the inverse functions of cubic functions without having to restrict their domains. However, as we know, not all cubic polynomials are one-to-one. Some functions that are not one-to-one may have their domain restricted so that they are one-to-one, but only over that domain. The function over the restricted domain would then have an inverse function. Since quadratic functions are not one-to-one, we must restrict their domain in order to find their inverses.
If a function is not one-to-one, it cannot have an inverse. If we restrict the domain of the function so that it becomes one-to-one, thus creating a new function, this new function will have an inverse.
Given a polynomial function, restrict the domain of a function that is not one-to-one and then find the inverse.
with
and
and rename the function or pair of function
by ensuring that the outputs of the inverse function correspond to the restricted domain of the original function.
Find the inverse function of
The original function
is not one-to-one, but the function is restricted to a domain of
or
on which it is one-to-one. See [link].
To find the inverse, start by replacing
with the simple variable
This is not a function as written. We need to examine the restrictions on the domain of the original function to determine the inverse. Since we reversed the roles of
and
for the original
we looked at the domain: the values
could assume. When we reversed the roles of
and
this gave us the values
could assume. For this function,
so for the inverse, we should have
which is what our inverse function gives.
so the outputs of the inverse need to be the same,
and we must use the + case:
so the outputs of the inverse need to be the same,
and we must use the – case:
On the graphs in [link], we see the original function graphed on the same set of axes as its inverse function. Notice that together the graphs show symmetry about the line
The coordinate pair
is on the graph of
and the coordinate pair
is on the graph of
For any coordinate pair, if
is on the graph of
then
is on the graph of
Finally, observe that the graph of
intersects the graph of
on the line
Points of intersection for the graphs of
and
will always lie on the line
Restrict the domain and then find the inverse of
We can see this is a parabola with vertex at
that opens upward. Because the graph will be decreasing on one side of the vertex and increasing on the other side, we can restrict this function to a domain on which it will be one-to-one by limiting the domain to
To find the inverse, we will use the vertex form of the quadratic. We start by replacing
with a simple variable,
then solve for
Now we need to determine which case to use. Because we restricted our original function to a domain of
the outputs of the inverse should be the same, telling us to utilize the + case
If the quadratic had not been given in vertex form, rewriting it into vertex form would be the first step. This way we may easily observe the coordinates of the vertex to help us restrict the domain.
Notice that we arbitrarily decided to restrict the domain on
We could just have easily opted to restrict the domain on
in which case
Observe the original function graphed on the same set of axes as its inverse function in [link]. Notice that both graphs show symmetry about the line
The coordinate pair
is on the graph of
and the coordinate pair
is on the graph of
Observe from the graph of both functions on the same set of axes that
and
Finally, observe that the graph of
intersects the graph of
along the line
Find the inverse of the function
on the domain
Notice that the functions from previous examples were all polynomials, and their inverses were radical functions. If we want to find the inverse of a radical function, we will need to restrict the domain of the answer because the range of the original function is limited.
Given a radical function, find the inverse.
with
then solve for
Restrict the domain of the function
and then find the inverse.
Note that the original function has range
Replace
with
then solve for
Recall that the domain of this function must be limited to the range of the original function.
Notice in [link] that the inverse is a reflection of the original function over the line
Because the original function has only positive outputs, the inverse function has only positive inputs.
Restrict the domain and then find the inverse of the function
Radical functions are common in physical models, as we saw in the section opener. We now have enough tools to be able to solve the problem posed at the start of the section.
A mound of gravel is in the shape of a cone with the height equal to twice the radius. The volume of the cone in terms of the radius is given by
Find the inverse of the function
that determines the volume
of a cone and is a function of the radius
Then use the inverse function to calculate the radius of such a mound of gravel measuring 100 cubic feet. Use
Start with the given function for
Notice that the meaningful domain for the function is
since negative radii would not make sense in this context nor would a radius of 0. Also note the range of the function (hence, the domain of the inverse function) is
Solve for
in terms of
using the method outlined previously. Note that in real-world applications, we do not swap the variables when finding inverses. Instead, we change which variable is considered to be the independent variable.
This is the result stated in the section opener. Now evaluate this for
and
Therefore, the radius is about 3.63 ft.
When radical functions are composed with other functions, determining domain can become more complicated.
Find the domain of the function
Because a square root is only defined when the quantity under the radical is non-negative, we need to determine where
The output of a rational function can change signs (change from positive to negative or vice versa) at x-intercepts and at vertical asymptotes. For this equation, the graph could change signs at
To determine the intervals on which the rational expression is positive, we could test some values in the expression or sketch a graph. While both approaches work equally well, for this example we will use a graph as shown in [link].
This function has two x-intercepts, both of which exhibit linear behavior near the x-intercepts. There is one vertical asymptote, corresponding to a linear factor; this behavior is similar to the basic reciprocal toolkit function, and there is no horizontal asymptote because the degree of the numerator is larger than the degree of the denominator. There is a y-intercept at
From the y-intercept and x-intercept at
we can sketch the left side of the graph. From the behavior at the asymptote, we can sketch the right side of the graph.
From the graph, we can now tell on which intervals the outputs will be non-negative, so that we can be sure that the original function
will be defined.
has domain
or in interval notation,
As with finding inverses of quadratic functions, it is sometimes desirable to find the inverse of a rational function, particularly of rational functions that are the ratio of linear functions, such as in concentration applications.
The function
represents the concentration
of an acid solution after
mL of 40% solution has been added to 100 mL of a 20% solution. First, find the inverse of the function; that is, find an expression for
in terms of
Then use your result to determine how much of the 40% solution should be added so that the final mixture is a 35% solution.
We first want the inverse of the function in order to determine how many mL we need for a given concentration. We will solve for
in terms of
Now evaluate this function at 35%, which is
We can conclude that 300 mL of the 40% solution should be added.
Find the inverse of the function
Access these online resources for additional instruction and practice with inverses and radical functions.
is the inverse of a function
then
is the inverse of the function
See [link].
Explain why we cannot find inverse functions for all polynomial functions.
It can be too difficult or impossible to solve for
in terms of
Why must we restrict the domain of a quadratic function when finding its inverse?
When finding the inverse of a radical function, what restriction will we need to make?
We will need a restriction on the domain of the answer.
The inverse of a quadratic function will always take what form?
For the following exercises, find the inverse of the function on the given domain.
For the following exercises, find the inverse of the functions.
For the following exercises, find the inverse of the functions.
For the following exercises, find the inverse of the function and graph both the function and its inverse.
For the following exercises, use a graph to help determine the domain of the functions.
For the following exercises, use a calculator to graph the function. Then, using the graph, give three points on the graph of the inverse with y-coordinates given.
For the following exercises, find the inverse of the functions with
positive real numbers.
For the following exercises, determine the function described and then use it to answer the question.
An object dropped from a height of 200 meters has a height,
in meters after
seconds have lapsed, such that
Express
as a function of height,
and find the time to reach a height of 50 meters.
5.53 seconds
An object dropped from a height of 600 feet has a height,
in feet after
seconds have elapsed, such that
Express
as a function of height
and find the time to reach a height of 400 feet.
The volume,
of a sphere in terms of its radius,
is given by
Express
as a function of
and find the radius of a sphere with volume of 200 cubic feet.
3.63 feet
The surface area,
of a sphere in terms of its radius,
is given by
Express
as a function of
and find the radius of a sphere with a surface area of 1000 square inches.
A container holds 100 mL of a solution that is 25 mL acid. If
mL of a solution that is 60% acid is added, the function
gives the concentration,
as a function of the number of mL added,
Express
as a function of
and determine the number of mL that need to be added to have a solution that is 50% acid.
250 mL
The period
in seconds, of a simple pendulum as a function of its length
in feet, is given by
. Express
as a function of
and determine the length of a pendulum with period of 2 seconds.
The volume of a cylinder ,
in terms of radius,
and height,
is given by
If a cylinder has a height of 6 meters, express the radius as a function of
and find the radius of a cylinder with volume of 300 cubic meters.
3.99 meters
The surface area,
of a cylinder in terms of its radius,
and height,
is given by
If the height of the cylinder is 4 feet, express the radius as a function of
and find the radius if the surface area is 200 square feet.
The volume of a right circular cone,
in terms of its radius,
and its height,
is given by
Express
in terms of
if the height of the cone is 12 feet and find the radius of a cone with volume of 50 cubic inches.
1.99 inches
Consider a cone with height of 30 feet. Express the radius,
in terms of the volume,
and find the radius of a cone with volume of 1000 cubic feet.
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