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Mathematics 20 Online
OpenStudy (anonymous):

Given the relation {(7, 3), (-6, 1), (4,9), (-2, 5)} find the range of its inverse. A. (1, 3, 5, 9) B. There is no inverse. C. (-6, -2, 4, 7) D. There is no range

OpenStudy (anonymous):

1.) Find the Inverse of the relation 2.) Find the Range (x, y) x = domain y = range

OpenStudy (mathstudent55):

In an inverse, the domain becomes the range and the range becomes the domain. The range of the inverse relation is the domain of the relation.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

So is the answer A.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Nope.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

a.) would be the range of the original relation, not the inverse.

OpenStudy (mathstudent55):

A is the range of the original relation.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

^ yup :)

OpenStudy (anonymous):

So is it C.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

yup

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Given: {(7, 3), (-6, 1), (4,9), (-2, 5)} Inverse: {(3, 7), (1, -6), (9,4), (5, -2)}

OpenStudy (anonymous):

{BEST RESPONSE} for anyone?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

@douglas12

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