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Chapter 5 AP Calculus AB Differentiation by Logarithmic, Exponential, and Transcendental Functions

Chapter 5 AP Calculus AB Differentiation by Logarithmic, Exponential, and Transcendental Functions. Theorem 5.1. Properties of the Natural Logarithmic Function The domain is (0,∞) and the range is (-∞,∞) The function is continuous, increasing, and one to one The graph is concave downward.

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Chapter 5 AP Calculus AB Differentiation by Logarithmic, Exponential, and Transcendental Functions

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  1. Chapter 5 AP Calculus ABDifferentiation by Logarithmic, Exponential, and Transcendental Functions

  2. Theorem 5.1 • Properties of the Natural Logarithmic Function • The domain is (0,∞) and the range is (-∞,∞) • The function is continuous, increasing, and one to one • The graph is concave downward

  3. Theorem 5.2 • Logarithmic Properties • Ln(1)=0 • Ln(ab)=lna+lnb • Ln(a^n)=nln(a) • Ln(a/b)=ln(a)-ln(b) • Definition of e

  4. Theorem 5.3+5.4+5.5

  5. Theorem 5.6: Reflective Property • The graph of g contains the point (a,b) if and only if f^-1 contains point (b,a) • Inverse Function Definition: • f(g(x))=x for each x in the domain of g • g(f(x))=x for each x in the domain of f

  6. Theorem 5.7 • A function has an inverse function if and only if it is one to one • If f is strictly monotonic on its entire domain, then it is on to one and therefore has an inverse function

  7. Theorem 5.8

  8. Theorem 5.9: Derivative of an Inverse Function

  9. Properties of the Natural Exponential Function

  10. Theorem 5.11+5.12

  11. Theorem 5.13

  12. Theorem 5.14

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