problem of the day (calculator allowed) let f be a function that is differentiable on the open...

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Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = - 5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5, which of the following must be true? I. f has at least 2 zeroes II. The graph of f has at least one horizontal tangent. III. For some c, 2 < c < 5, f(c) = 3. A) None B) I only C) I and II only D) I and III only E) I, II, and III

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Page 1: Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5,

Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed)

Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5, which of the following must be true?

I. f has at least 2 zeroesII. The graph of f has at least one horizontal tangent.III. For some c, 2 < c < 5, f(c) = 3.A) NoneB) I onlyC) I and II onlyD) I and III onlyE) I, II, and III

Page 2: Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5,

Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed)

Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5, which of the following must be true?

I. f has at least 2 zeroesII. The graph of f has at least one horizontal tangent.III. For some c, 2 < c < 5, f(c) = 3.A) NoneB) I onlyC) I and II onlyD) I and III onlyE) I, II, and III

I. 2 sign changes implies 2 zeroesII. Rolle's TheoremIII. Intermediate Value Theorem

Page 3: Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5,

•Discuss concavity as an indicator of function behavior •Recognize inflection as a change in the rate of change•Use the 2nd Derivative Test

3-4: Concavity & The Second Derivative TestObjectives

:

©2002 Roy L. Gover (www.mrgover.com)

Page 4: Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5,

DefinitionConcave up means the graph of f is above the tangent lines.

f

Page 5: Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5,

Concave down means the graph of f is below the tangent lines.

f

Definition

Page 6: Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5,

Definition

Concave up “holds water”

Page 7: Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5,

Definition

Concave down “spills water”

Page 8: Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5,

Analysis 31

( )3

f x x x 2'( ) 1f x x

Is there a relationship between the graphs of f(x) & f ’(x)?

Is there a relationship between the concavity of f(x) and f’(x)?

Where does concavity change?Is there a relationship between where concavity changes and f’(x)?

Page 9: Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5,

DefinitionGraph of f is concave up on interval I if f’ is increasing on I

Concave Up

f’(x) increasing

Page 10: Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5,

DefinitionGraph of f is concave down on interval I if f’ is decreasing on I

Concave Down

f’(x) decreasing

Page 11: Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5,

Review•f’ >0: slope of the tangent lines are positive; f is incr.•f’ <0: slope of the tangent lines are negative; f is decr.•f’ =0: slope of the tangent line is zero;f is neither increasing nor decreasing.

Page 12: Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5,

Important Ideaf ’’>0:slope

of tangent lines are becoming more positive (less negative) from left to right.

f(x)

f ‘(x)

f”(x)

Page 13: Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5,

Important Ideas

f ’’=0:slope of tangent lines are not changing.

f(x)

f ‘(x)

f”(x)

Page 14: Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5,

Important Ideas

f ’’<0:slope of tangent lines are becoming more negative (less positive) from left to right.

f(x)

f ‘(x)

f”(x)

Page 15: Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5,

Important IdeaLet f be a function such that f” exists on (a,b), then:

•f” (x)>0 for all x in (a,b) f is concave up.•f” (x)<0 for all x in (a,b) f is concave down.

Page 16: Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5,

Procedure

1. Locate x values at which f ’’=0 or undefined.2. Use these x values to determine intervals.3. Test the sign of f ’’ in each interval

Determining Concavity:

Page 17: Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5,

ExampleDetermine the open intervals on which

is concave up and concave down...

1( )

3

xf x

x

Page 18: Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5,

ExampleStep 1:Find the values of x where f ” =0 or undefinedStep 2:Make a table using intervals determined in step 1Step 3:Choose a value in each interval & evaluate the 2nd derivative at the value

Page 19: Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5,

Warm-UpDetermine the open intervals on which the graph of

is concave up and concave down.

2

6( )

3f x

x

Page 20: Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5,

Solution

IntervalTest Value

-2 0 2

Sign f ”(x)

+ - +

Concl. Up Down

Up

( , 1) ( 1,1) (1, )

Up

Down

Upf(x)2

2 3

36( 1)"( )

( 3)

xf x

x

Page 21: Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5,

Definition•Inflection point is the point where concavity changes.•Inflection points occur where f’’(x)=0 or is undefined but f ”(x)=0 or undefined doesn’t guarantee an inflection point.

Page 22: Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5,

Important Idea•An inflection point is the point where concavity changes.•An inflection point is where the rate of change changes from increasing to decreasing or vice versa.

Page 23: Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5,

4( )f x xTry This

Confirm that has a point of inflection at (0,0).

No inflection point at (0,0)

Page 24: Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5,

Definition2nd Derivative Test:Let f be a function such that f’(c)=0 and f” exists:•If f’’(c)>0, then f(c) is a local min•If f’’ (c)<0, then f(c) is a local max•If f” (c)=0, test fails

Page 25: Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5,

Procedure

1. Find critical numbers by setting f’(x)=0.

2.Find f’’(c) where c is a critical number.3. f ”(c)>0 local min; f ”(c)<0 local max.

Second Derivative Test:

Page 26: Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5,

ExampleFind the relative extrema (max and/or min) of:

using the second derivative test

4 3( ) 4f x x x

Page 27: Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5,

Try ThisFind the relative extrema (max and/or min) of:

using the second derivative test

5 3( ) 3 5f x x x

Page 28: Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5,

SolutionMax at (1,2)

Min at (-1,-2)

What did you do to determine there was no extrema at (0,0) since f ”(0)=0?

Page 29: Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5,

Lesson Close•How do you test for concavity?

•To test for local extrema, do you prefer the 1st derivative or 2nd derivative test? Why?

Page 30: Problem of the Day (Calculator allowed) Let f be a function that is differentiable on the open interval (1, 10). If f(2) = -5, f(5) = 5, and f(9) = -5,

Assignment

195/1-5 odd, 21-35 odd