Domain and Range of Rational Functions

Finding the Domains of Rational Functions

A vertical asymptote represents a value at which a rational function is undefined, so that value is not in the domain of the function. A reciprocal function cannot have values in its domain that cause the denominator to equal zero. In general, to find the domain of a rational function, we need to determine which inputs would cause division by zero.

Domain of a Rational Function

The domain of a rational function includes all real numbers except those that cause the denominator to equal zero.

HOW TO

Given a rational function, find the domain.

  1. Set the denominator equal to zero.

  2. Solve to find the x-values that cause the denominator to equal zero.

  3. The domain is all real numbers except those found in Step 2.

Example 4

Finding the Domain of a Rational Function

Find the domain of f(x)=\frac{x+3}{x^{2}-9}.

Solution

Begin by setting the denominator equal to zero and solving.

\begin{aligned}
x^{2}-9 &=0 \\
x^{2} &=9 \\
x &=\pm 3
\end{aligned}

The denominator is equal to zero when x=\pm 3 . The domain of the function is all real numbers except x=\pm 3.

Analysis

A graph of this function, as shown in Figure 8, confirms that the function is not defined when x=\pm 3 .

Graph of f(x)=1/(x-3) with its vertical asymptote at x=3 and its horizontal asymptote at y=0.

Figure 8

There is a vertical asymptote at x=3 and a hole in the graph at x=−3. We will discuss these types of holes in greater detail later in this section.

Try It #4

Find the domain of f(x)=\frac{4 x}{5(x-1)(x-5)}.


Source: Rice University, https://openstax.org/books/college-algebra/pages/5-6-rational-functions
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