Reciprocal Graph y = k/x

\( y=\tfrac{k}{x}\;(k\ne0)\;\text{ has asymptotes }x=0,\;y=0 \)
Graphs GCSE
Question 1 of 20

\( State the horizontal asymptote of y=\tfrac{40}{x} \)

Hint (H)
As x→∞, y→0

Explanation

Show / hide — toggle with X

Statement

The reciprocal function is given by:

\[ y = \frac{k}{x}, \quad k \neq 0. \]

Its graph is a rectangular hyperbola with two branches, one in the first and third quadrants if \(k > 0\), and one in the second and fourth quadrants if \(k < 0\). The asymptotes are the coordinate axes \(x = 0\) and \(y = 0\).

Why it’s true

  • Division by zero is undefined, so the function cannot cross \(x = 0\). This makes \(x = 0\) a vertical asymptote.
  • As \(x \to \infty\), \(y \to 0\). Similarly, as \(x \to -\infty\), \(y \to 0\). Therefore, \(y = 0\) is a horizontal asymptote.
  • The symmetry of the graph arises because multiplying numerator and denominator by \(-1\) shows the function is odd: \(f(-x) = -f(x)\).

Recipe (how to use it)

  1. Identify the constant \(k\).
  2. Plot a few values of \(y = k/x\) for both positive and negative \(x\).
  3. Sketch the hyperbola in the correct quadrants.
  4. Mark the asymptotes \(x=0\) and \(y=0\).

Spotting it

Whenever the equation has the form \(y = k/x\) or \(y = \text{constant}/x\), it’s a reciprocal graph. It never crosses the axes, only approaches them.

Common pairings

  • Transformations such as \(y = \frac{k}{x} + c\) (moves the graph up or down).
  • Sketching functions in exam questions.
  • Inverse proportionality in real-life contexts (e.g., time vs speed).

Mini examples

  1. \(y = \tfrac{4}{x}\) → passes through (1,4), (2,2), (4,1), with asymptotes x=0, y=0.
  2. \(y = -\tfrac{3}{x}\) → branches in 2nd and 4th quadrants.

Pitfalls

  • Forgetting asymptotes — the graph never touches the axes.
  • Mixing quadrants — positive \(k\) gives quadrants I and III; negative \(k\) gives quadrants II and IV.
  • Only plotting positive \(x\)-values — must include negatives as well.

Exam strategy

  • Always sketch at least 3–4 points in each branch.
  • Clearly mark asymptotes on your diagram.
  • Check the sign of \(k\) to choose correct quadrants.

Summary

The reciprocal function is a standard non-linear graph that shows inverse proportionality. It has asymptotes at both axes, with branch placement determined by the sign of \(k\). It is a frequent exam topic in graph sketching and real-world modelling.

Worked examples

Show / hide (10) — toggle with E
  1. \( Sketch y = 4/x. State the asymptotes. \)
    1. \( Equation: y=4/x \)
    2. \( Asymptotes: x=0 and y=0 \)
    Answer: \( Asymptotes: x=0, y=0 \)
  2. \( What quadrants does y = 5/x occupy? \)
    1. \( k=5 > 0 \)
    2. Graph lies in quadrants I and III
    Answer: Quadrants I and III
  3. \( What quadrants does y = -2/x occupy? \)
    1. \( k=-2 < 0 \)
    2. Graph lies in quadrants II and IV
    Answer: Quadrants II and IV
  4. \( Find y when x=2 in y=6/x \)
    1. \( y=6/2=3 \)
    Answer: 3
  5. \( Find y when x=-4 in y=8/x \)
    1. \( y=8/(-4)=-2 \)
    Answer: -2
  6. \( State the asymptotes of y=-7/x \)
    1. \( Equation: y=-7/x \)
    2. \( Asymptotes: x=0, y=0 \)
    Answer: \( x=0, y=0 \)
  7. \( Find y when x=1/2 in y=3/x \)
    1. \( y=3/(1/2)=6 \)
    Answer: 6
  8. \( Find x when y=5 in y=20/x \)
    1. \( 20/x=5 → x=20/5=4 \)
    Answer: 4
  9. \( For y=12/x, find y when x=-3 \)
    1. \( y=12/(-3)=-4 \)
    Answer: -4
  10. \( For y=-15/x, state asymptotes and quadrants \)
    1. \( Equation: y=-15/x \)
    2. \( Asymptotes: x=0, y=0 \)
    3. k<0 so quadrants II and IV
    Answer: \( Asymptotes: x=0, y=0. Quadrants: II and IV \)