I have a question about identifying the horizontal and oblique asymtotes
In this chapter the notes states
1. If n < m, the horizontal line y=0 (the x-axis) is the horizontal asymptote for f.
(-4)/(x+9) y=0
2. If n = m, the horizontal line y=(a^n/b^m) is the horizontal asymptote for f.
(x^2+9x-5)/(-x^2+36)
(1x^2)/(-1x^2) = Y=-1
3. If n = m + 1, the line y = g(x) is an oblique asymptote for f, where g is the quotient polynomial obtained by dividing p by q (the remainder polynomial is irrelevant).
(8x^2+28x+20)/(-2x-9)
degrees are n = m + 1
sorry not sure how to show my division problem so I inserted the image
y=-4x+64
4. If n > m + 1, there is no straight-line or oblique asymptote for f.
This one is what I'm not sure of. I'm thinking if the remainder show 0 then it maybe none but I don't know.
Thanks,
Sunwers
In this chapter the notes states
1. If n < m, the horizontal line y=0 (the x-axis) is the horizontal asymptote for f.
(-4)/(x+9) y=0
2. If n = m, the horizontal line y=(a^n/b^m) is the horizontal asymptote for f.
(x^2+9x-5)/(-x^2+36)
(1x^2)/(-1x^2) = Y=-1
3. If n = m + 1, the line y = g(x) is an oblique asymptote for f, where g is the quotient polynomial obtained by dividing p by q (the remainder polynomial is irrelevant).
(8x^2+28x+20)/(-2x-9)
degrees are n = m + 1
sorry not sure how to show my division problem so I inserted the image

4. If n > m + 1, there is no straight-line or oblique asymptote for f.
This one is what I'm not sure of. I'm thinking if the remainder show 0 then it maybe none but I don't know.
Thanks,
Sunwers