Check Whether \(f(x)=x^3+4\) is Bijective and Find \(f^{-1}(3)\)

📺 Video Explanation

📝 Question

Let:

\[ f:\mathbb{R}\to\mathbb{R},\qquad f(x)=x^3+4 \]

Check whether \(f\) is bijection. If yes, find:

\[ f^{-1}(3) \]


✅ Solution

🔹 Step 1: Check one-one

Assume:

\[ f(x_1)=f(x_2) \]

Then:

\[ x_1^3+4=x_2^3+4 \]

So:

\[ x_1^3=x_2^3 \]

Hence:

\[ x_1=x_2 \]

Therefore:

\[ f \text{ is one-one} \]


🔹 Step 2: Check onto

Let:

\[ y\in\mathbb{R} \]

Need:

\[ f(x)=y \]

So:

\[ x^3+4=y \]

\[ x^3=y-4 \]

\[ x=\sqrt[3]{y-4} \]

Since cube root exists for every real number:

\[ x\in\mathbb{R} \]

Hence:

\[ f \text{ is onto} \]


🔹 Step 3: Conclusion

Since \(f\) is both one-one and onto:

\[ f \text{ is bijection} \]

So inverse exists:

\[ f^{-1}(x)=\sqrt[3]{x-4} \]


🔹 Step 4: Find \(f^{-1}(3)\)

\[ f^{-1}(3)=\sqrt[3]{3-4} \]

\[ =\sqrt[3]{-1} \]

\[ \boxed{f^{-1}(3)=-1} \]


🎯 Final Answer

\[ \boxed{f \text{ is bijective}} \]

\[ \boxed{f^{-1}(x)=\sqrt[3]{x-4}} \]

and:

\[ \boxed{f^{-1}(3)=-1} \]


🚀 Exam Shortcut

  • Cubic functions are bijections on \(\mathbb{R}\)
  • Solve \(y=x^3+4\) for \(x\)
  • Use cube root directly
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