I'm asking a graph question that has bothered me a while. I'm considering two graphs here:
$$ y=(x+2)^2 $$ $$ y=x^2 + 4 $$
As can be seen, both the difference is a mere $4x$. I would like to know if we were to draw out the graphs, the graph with an additional $4x$ causes the graph to be behind the one without $4x$. Also, for any real value of $x$, why would the difference between the two graphs increase when $x \lt 2$? Does it have to do with rates of change? Thanks!
The difference (by which I mean the absolute value of the differences) increases when $x$ moves away from $0$--that's obvious by the difference which is $\left|4x\right|$. And the the two graphs are the same: the first, $y = \left(x + 2\right)^2$, is a regular parabola shifted to the left by two and the second, $y = x^2 + 4$, is a regular parabola shifted to up by four. The only reason the first is "behind" the first is because they are the same and the first one starts to the left and below the second.