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Graph Transformations, Rates of Change, and Circles (Higher)

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·Edexcel GCSE Mathematics·Pearson Edexcel 1MA1·5 min
A13·A15·A16

Graph Transformations — Translations (A13 Higher)

Given a function , the following transformations produce new graphs:

TransformationEquationEffect on graph
Translate right by Every point moves right
Translate left by Every point moves left
Translate up by Every point moves up
Translate down by Every point moves down

Worked example. Sketch .

Translate the graph of right by 3 and up by 2. The turning point moves from to .

Key check: in , the sign in the bracket is opposite to the direction of movement. moves right (not left).

Graph Transformations — Reflections (A13 Higher)

TransformationEquationEffect
Reflect in -axisAll -values negate; graph flips vertically
Reflect in -axisAll -values negate; graph flips horizontally

Worked example. Sketch and .

: the sine wave flips upside down — peaks become troughs. The maximum of is (at , since ); the minimum is (at ).

: for , reflecting in the -axis gives the same result (sin is an odd function). For : — the graph is unchanged (cos is an even function).

Marking key features: state coordinates of any turning points, intercepts, or asymptotes after transformation.

Gradients and Areas Under Graphs (A15 Higher)

Gradient at a point on a curve — estimated by drawing a tangent at that point and calculating the gradient of the tangent.

  • On a distance-time graph: gradient = instantaneous speed
  • On a velocity-time graph: gradient = acceleration
  • On a financial graph: gradient = rate of change of value

Worked example — estimate the gradient of a curve at the point by drawing the tangent. The tangent passes through and .

(if this were a velocity-time graph, this is the acceleration at )

Area under a graph:

  • Under a velocity-time graph: area = distance travelled
  • Under a distance-time graph: not physically meaningful as area
  • Under a financial graph: may represent total cumulative value

Estimate irregular areas using the trapezium rule or by counting grid squares.

Equation of a Circle (A16 Higher)

A circle with centre at the origin and radius has equation:

Worked examples:

: centre , radius

: centre , radius

Does a point lie on the circle? Substitute the coordinates. If the equation is satisfied, the point is on the circle.

Point on :

Point on : — not on the circle.

Finding the radius: rearrange into the form and take the positive square root.

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Tangent to a Circle at a Given Point (A16 Higher)

A radius from the origin to a point on the circle is perpendicular to the tangent at that point.

Method:

  1. Find the gradient of the radius from to :
  2. The tangent gradient is the negative reciprocal:
  3. Use to write the tangent equation.

Worked example — find the equation of the tangent to at the point .

Gradient of radius:

Tangent gradient:

Check: at :

Common Exam Mistakes

1. Transformations — sign direction error

translates right by 3, not left. The rule is: moves the graph in the positive -direction (right).

2. Gradient at a point — using the chord instead of the tangent

A chord connects two points on the curve; the tangent just touches it. Drawing a secant chord (not a tangent) and calculating its gradient gives an estimate for the average gradient, not the instantaneous gradient.

3. Circle equation — forgetting to square the radius

, not . The number on the right-hand side is .

4. Tangent — using the same gradient as the radius

The tangent gradient is the negative reciprocal of the radius gradient, not the same. The radius from origin to has gradient ; the tangent gradient is .

MistakeCorrection
" shifts right by 2" shifts left by 2 (replace with : input decreases)
"Circle has radius 9"Radius
"Tangent at on has gradient "Radius gradient ; tangent gradient

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