1 / 23

Final Exam Review

Final Exam Review. Final Exam: Krieger 205 on Thursday, May 7 from 9am-12noon. It will be a comprehensive exam covering the entire semester’s material No notes or calculators No makeup exams. Calculation of limits. Rules: sum, difference, product, quotient of limits, powers of limits

sera
Télécharger la présentation

Final Exam Review

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. Final Exam Review Final Exam: Krieger 205 on Thursday, May 7 from 9am-12noon. It will be a comprehensive exam covering the entire semester’s material • No notes or calculators • No makeup exams

  2. Calculation of limits • Rules: sum, difference, product, quotient of limits, powers of limits • Algebraic manipulations, e.g. limx3(x2-6x+9)/(x-3) • Rational limits at infinity (only top order terms count)

  3. Continuity • Definition: f is continuous at x=a if: (1) f is defined at a(2) limxa f(x)=f(a) • Rules for continuous functions: sum, difference, product, quotient, powers • Right, left continuity • Continuity on open or closed intervals

  4. Derivative • Derivative of f(x) is instantaneous rate of change of f with respect to x • Derivative f (x) = slope of tangent line at x (limit of slopes of secant lines) • Formal definition:

  5. Calculating Derivatives • Product rule: (fg)=f g + f g  • Quotient rule: (f/g)  =[gf  - f g ]/g2 • Reciprocal rule: (1/g)  = - g  /g2

  6. Derivatives of all trig functions

  7. Chain rule

  8. Log & Exponential Functions • Logarithm is an exponent: bx and logb x are inverses of each other • ln x = logex, (d/dx) ln x = 1/x • (d/dx) ex = ex • logarithmic differentiation • e.g. compute derivative of xx

  9. Implicit Differentiation • Model problems:

  10. Derivatives of Inverse Trig Functions

  11. Related rates • Draw picture; label quantities that vary • Identify known rate of changes and one to be found • Find equation relating them • Differentiate • Model Example: Go over examples from class notes

  12. First and second derivatives • Sign of 1st derivative implies increasing/decreasing • Sign of 2nd derivative implies concave up/down • Stationery point: 1st derivative vanishes • Inflection point: Change of concavity

  13. 1st and 2nd derivative test • 1st derivative test: Relative max. (resp. min.) if 1st derivative changes from + to - (resp. - to +) • Second Derivative test: If f (x)=0 and f (x) < 0 then rel. max.; If f (x)=0 and f (x) > 0 then rel. min. • Relative extrema must occur at critical points

  14. Absolute Max/Min • Continuous functions on closed bounded intervals have absolute max. & min. • These must occur at critical points • Functions with exactly one relative extremum must have an absolute extremum at that point

  15. Indefinite integral

  16. Integration formulae

  17. Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

  18. Applications of integration • Area between curves • Volumes: Volume of rotating y=f(x) around the x-axis:

  19. Integration by substitution

  20. Substitution for definite integrals • Similar to indefinite case except need to deal with limits of integration • Two choices • Method 1: Make substitution, evaluate definite integral, convert back to x-valued function and use x-limits of integration • Method 2: Make substitution for integrand as well as limits of integration

  21. Integration by parts

  22. Improper integrals • Integrals over intervals of the form (-∞,a] or [a,+∞): Replace -∞, +∞ by l and take limits of the integrals over [l,a], [a,l], respectively • Integrals over [a,b] where f is not continuous at a: Take integrals over [c,b] and then take limits as c→a+ • Similar procedure if f not continuous at b or at some point c in [a,b]

  23. Approximations • Linear approximation to f at a: L(x) = f(a) + f (a) (x – a) • Taylor approximation of order n

More Related