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Applications of Derivatives. Curve Sketching. What the First Derivative Tells Us:. Suppose that a function f has a derivative at every point x of an interval I. Then:. What This Means:.
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Applications of Derivatives Curve Sketching
What the First Derivative Tells Us: • Suppose that a function f has a derivative at every point x of an interval I. Then:
What This Means: • In geometric terms, the first derivative tells us that differentiable functions increase on intervals where their graphs have positive slopes and decrease on intervals where their graphs have negative slopes. • WHAT HAPPENS IF THE FIRST DERIVATIVE IS ZERO?
When The First Derivative is Zero • A derivative has the intermediate value property on any interval on which it is defined. • It will take on the value zero when it changes signs over that interval. • Thus, when the derivative changes signs on an interval, the graph of f(x) must have a horizontal tangent.
HOWEVER… • A derivative need not change sign every time it is zero. Consider • The derivative is • The derivative is zero at the origin but positive on both sides of the origin.
Relative Maxima and Minima • If the derivative changes sign, there may be a local max or min, as shown here. • More on this later.
Concavity • Concave down—”spills water” • Concave up—”holds water” • The graph of is concave down on any interval where and concave up on any interval where
Points of Inflection • A point on the curve where the concavity changes is called a point of inflection. • If the second derivative is zero for some x, we may be able to find a point of inflection. • It IS possible for the second derivative to be zero at a point that is NOT a point of inflection. • A point of inflection may occur where the second derivative fails to exist.
Relative Extrema • Let f(x) be defined on an interval, I, and let x0 be in I. • 1. If f(x) has a relative extremum at x = x0 then either f’(x)=0 or f is not differentiable at x = x0. • 2. Values at which the derivative is zero at x0 or at which f is not differentiable at x = x0 are called critical numbers. • 3. If f is defined on an open interval, its relative extrema occur at critical numbers. • NOTE: This does NOT mean that a critical number MUST yield a relative extremum.
This is what happens around the point x0: The First Derivative and Relative Extrema
Assume that f is twice differentiable at x0. If: The Second Derivative and Relative Extrema
An Example: • This first derivative is equal to zero at x=0, x=1 and x= -1. • These are the critical values. • Examine the sign of the derivative around these values:
Furthermore… • The function is decreasing from ( ) and on (0,1) because the derivative is negative on those intervals. • The function is increasing on (-1,0) and on ( 1, ) because the derivative is positive on those intervals. • We will examine the second derivative for what it can tell us. • The second derivative is:
The Second Derivative. • The second derivative is equal to zero at x = • Examine the sign of the second derivative around these points: +++++ ------- +++++
Concavity • The function is concave up in those areas where the second derivative is positive and concave down in that area where the second derivative is negative. • If you check the sign of the second derivative at the critical values, you will find that this reinforces what we said before about the relative max and min.
Inflection Points • You can tell where the function changes concavity by finding the inflection points. • Evaluate the function at those values where the second derivative is zero; that is, at x = • Take a look at the graph of the original function:
Does It Check? • Check the intervals on which the function is increasing and decreasing. • Check the location of relative maxima and/or minima. • Check the concavity of the function. • The graph should match information determined from the derivatives.