Function transformation refers to the shifting, stretching, compressing, or reflecting of a function's graph. For the function in our problem, we are focusing on rewriting and interpreting it as a transformation of the parent function. The given function is initially expressed as \( g(x)=\frac{12x}{x-5} \). After conversion, it takes the form \( g(x)=\frac{12}{x-5} \), which is a variant of \( f(x)=\frac{a}{x-h}+k \).
- "\( a \)" in the function denotes vertical scaling. Here, \( a = 12 \), indicating the graph is stretched vertically by a factor of 12 compared to the simple reciprocal function \( f(x)=\frac{1}{x} \).
- "\( h \)" affects horizontal translation. The term \( x-h \) means the graph is shifted "h" units right. In this function, \( h = 5 \), thus \( g(x) \) moves 5 units to the right compared to \( f(x)=\frac{a}{x} \).
- "\( k \)" describes vertical translation. Since \( k = 0 \), there is no vertical shift.
These transformations result in the graph of \( g(x) \) being scaled, shifted, and thereby differing significantly from its parent form.