1 / 19

Rates of Change and Tangent Lines

Rates of Change and Tangent Lines . 2.4. Slope of a Curve. Tangent to a Curve. In calculus, we often want to define the rate at which the value of a function y = f(x) is changing

laguilar
Télécharger la présentation

Rates of Change and Tangent Lines

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Rates of Change and Tangent Lines 2.4

  2. Slope of a Curve

  3. Tangent to a Curve In calculus, we often want to define the rate at which the value of a function y = f(x) is changing with respect to x at any particular value x = a to be the slope of the tangent to the curve y = f(x) at x = a. The problem with this is that we only have one point and our usual definition of slope requires two points.

  4. Tangent to a Curve • The process becomes: • Start with what can be calculated, namely, the slope of a secant through P and a point Q nearby on the curve. • Find the limiting value of the secant slope (if it exists) as Q approaches P along the curve. • Define the slope of the curve at P to be this number and define the tangent to the curve at P to be the line through P with this slope.

  5. Slope of a Curve

  6. Example Find the slope of the parabola y = x2 at the point P(1,1). Write the equation for the tangent to the parabola at this point.

  7. The slope of a line is given by: The slope at (1,1) can be approximated by the slope of the secant through (4,16). We could get a better approximation if we move the point closer to (1,1). ie: (3,9) Even better would be the point (2,4).

  8. The slope of a line is given by: If we got really close to (1,1), say (1.1,1.21), the approximation would get better still How far can we go?

  9. slope at The slope of the curve at the point is: slope

  10. Slope of a Curve at a Point

  11. is called the difference quotient of f at a. The slope of the curve at the point is: If you are asked to find the slope using the definition or using the difference quotient, this is the technique you will use.

  12. Example Tangent to a Curve

  13. In the previous example, the tangent line could be found using . If you want the normal line, use the negative reciprocal of the slope. (in this case, ) The slope of a curve at a point is the same as the slope of the tangent line at that point. (The normal line is perpendicular.)

  14. Normal Line • The Normal Line to a curve at a point is the line perpendicular to the tangent at the point.

  15. Let a Find the slope at . Example 4:

  16. Let b Where is the slope ? Example 4:

  17. Example Normal to a Curve

  18. Example Average Rates of Change

  19. These are often mixed up by Calculus students! If is the position function: velocity = slope Review: average slope: slope at a point: average velocity: So are these! instantaneous velocity:

More Related