1 / 38

Review 3.1-3.3 - Increasing or Decreasing - Relative Extrema - Absolute Extrema - Concavity

Review 3.1-3.3 - Increasing or Decreasing - Relative Extrema - Absolute Extrema - Concavity. Increasing/Decreasing/Constant. Increasing/Decreasing/Constant. Increasing/Decreasing/Constant. Generic Example. The corresponding values of x are called Critical Points of f.

marisa
Télécharger la présentation

Review 3.1-3.3 - Increasing or Decreasing - Relative Extrema - Absolute Extrema - Concavity

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. Review 3.1-3.3- Increasing or Decreasing- Relative Extrema- Absolute Extrema- Concavity

  2. Increasing/Decreasing/Constant

  3. Increasing/Decreasing/Constant

  4. Increasing/Decreasing/Constant

  5. Generic Example The corresponding values of x are called Critical Points of f

  6. Critical Points of f A critical number of a function f is a number cin the domain off such that

  7. Example Find all the critical numbers of When set = 0 Excluded values

  8. Determine where the function is increasing or decreasing: Plug into the derivate around each critical # - - - - - + + + + + + -1 0 Increasing: (-1, ∞) Decreasing: (-∞, -1)

  9. Example Find all the critical numbers of When set = 0 Excluded values

  10. Determine where the function is increasing or decreasing: Plug into the derivate around each critical # - - - - - + + + Not in Domain Not in Domain -1 0 1 Increasing: (-1, 0) Decreasing: (0, 1)

  11. Example Find all the critical numbers of When set = 0 Excluded values

  12. Determine where the function is increasing or decreasing: Plug into the derivate around each critical # - - - - - + + + + + + - - - - - + + + + + + -1 0 1 Increasing: (- ∞, -1) U (1, ∞) Decreasing: (-1, 1)

  13. Local min. Local max. Graph of

  14. If the price of a certain item is p(x) and the total cost to produce x units is C(x), at what production levels is profit increasing and decreasing? Now find P’(x) Now test around 18, -2 Increasing: (0, 18) Decreasing: (18, ∞)

  15. Relative Extrema A function f has a relative (local) maximum at x=c if there exists an open interval (r, s) containing c suchthat f (x)= f (c) Relative Maxima

  16. Relative Extrema A function f has a relative (local) minimum at x=c if there exists an open interval (r, s) containing c suchthat f (c) = f (x) Relative Minima

  17. The First Derivative Test Determine the sign of the derivative of f to the left and right of the critical point. left right conclusion f (c) is a relative maximum f (c) is a relative minimum No change No relative extremum

  18. Relative max. f (0) = 1 Relative min. f (4) = -31 The First Derivative Test Find all the relative extrema of Excluded Values: None + 0 - 0 + 0 4

  19. The First Derivative Test

  20. The First Derivative Test Find all the relative extrema of Excluded Values: None - - - - - + + + - - - - - + + + -1 0 1 Rel. Min. (1, -2) Rel. Max. (-1, 2)

  21. Example from before: Relative max. Relative min. Exclude Values: + ND + 0 - ND - 0 + ND + -1 0 1

  22. Rel. min. Rel. max. Graph of

  23. Absolute Extrema Let f be a functiondefined on a domain D Absolute Maximum Absolute Minimum

  24. Absolute Extrema A function f has an absolute (global) maximum atx = c if f (x)= f (c)for allx in the domain D of f. The number f (c) is called the absolute maximumvalue of f in D Absolute Maximum

  25. Absolute Extrema A function f has an absolute (global) minimum atx = c if f (c)= f (x)for allx in the domain D of f. The number f (c) is called the absolute minimumvalue of f in D Absolute Minimum

  26. Finding absolute extrema on [a,b] • Find all critical numbers for f (x) in (a,b). • Evaluate f (x) for all critical numbers in (a,b). • Evaluate f (x) for the endpoints a and b of the interval [a,b]. • The largest value found in steps 2 and 3 is the absolute maximum for f on the interval [a , b], and the smallest value found is the absolute minimum for f on [a,b].

  27. Absolute Max. Absolute Min. Absolute Max. Example Find the absolute extrema of Critical values of f inside the interval (-1/2,3) are x = 0, 2 Evaluate

  28. Example Find the absolute extrema of Critical values of f inside the interval (-1/2,3) are x = 0, 2 Absolute Max. Absolute Min.

  29. Example Find the absolute extrema of Critical values of f inside the interval (-1/2,1) is x = 0 only Absolute Max. Evaluate Absolute Min.

  30. Example Find the absolute extrema of Critical values of f inside the interval (-1/2,1) is x = 0 only Absolute Max. Absolute Min.

  31. Concavity Let f be a differentiable function on (a, b). 1.f is concave upward on (a, b) if f' is increasing on aa(a, b). That is f ''(x)>0 for each value of x in (a, b). 2.f is concave downward on (a, b) if f' is decreasing on (a, b). That is f ''(x)< 0 for each value of x in (a, b). concave upward concave downward

  32. Inflection Point A point on the graph of f at which fis continuousandconcavity changes is called an inflection point. To search for inflection points, find any point, c in the domain where f ''(x)=0 or f ''(x)is undefined. If f ''changes sign from the left to the right of c, then (c,f (c))is an inflection point of f.

  33. Example: Inflection Points Find all inflection points of

  34. Inflection point at x 2 - 0 + 2

More Related