Rates of Change and Tangent Lines

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Warm Up Page 92 Quick Review Exercises 9, 10.
Advertisements

Sec 3.1: Tangents and the Derivative at a Point
Chapter 2  2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Section 2.4 Rates of Change and Tangent Lines Limits and Continuity.
2.4 Rates of Change and Tangent Lines. What you’ll learn about Average Rates of Change Tangent to a Curve Slope of a Curve Normal to a Curve Speed Revisited.
Limit and Continuity.
Warmup describe the interval(s) on which the function is continuous
Rate of change and tangent lines
Rates of Change and Tangent Lines
Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Prentice Hall 2.4 Rates of Change and Tangent Lines.
2.4 RATES OF CHANGE & TANGENT LINES. Average Rate of Change  The average rate of change of a quantity over a period of time is the slope on that interval.
The Derivative Chapter 3:. What is a derivative? A mathematical tool for studying the rate at which one quantity changes relative to another.
AP CALCULUS 1005: Secants and Tangents. Objectives SWBAT determine the tangent line by finding the limit of the secant lines of a function. SW use both.
Business Calculus Rates of Change Types of Change  Average rate of change: the average rate of change of y with respect to x is a ratio of.
DO NOW: Use Composite of Continuous Functions THM to show f(x) is continuous.
Rates of Change and Tangent Lines Section 2.4. Average Rates of Change The average rate of change of a quantity over a period of time is the amount of.
3.4 Velocity and Other Rates of Change
Chapter 14 Section 14.3 Curves. x y z To get the equation of the line we need to know two things, a direction vector d and a point on the line P. To find.
2.4 Rates of Change and Tangent Lines
RATES OF CHANGE & TANGENT LINES DAY 1 AP Calculus AB.
Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Prentice Hall Slide 2- 1.
2.4 Rates of Change and Tangent Lines Quick Review In Exercises 1 and 2, find the increments Dx and Dy from point A to point B. In Exercises 3 and 4,
2.4 Rates of Change and Tangent Lines Calculus. Finding average rate of change.
Chapter 3.1 Tangents and the Derivative at a Point.
Chapter 2 Review Calculus. Quick Review 1.) f(2) = 0 2.) f(2) = 11/12 3.) f(2) = 0 4.) f(2) = 1/3.
Two kinds of rate of change Q: A car travels 110 miles in 2 hours. What’s its average rate of change (speed)? A: 110/2 = 55 mi/hr. That is, if we drive.
Warm Up Determine a) ∞ b) 0 c) ½ d) 3/10 e) – Rates of Change and Tangent Lines.
AP CALCULUS 1006: Secants and Tangents. Average Rates of Change The AVERAGE SPEED (average rate of change) of a quantity over a period of time is the.
Motion and Motion Graphs
Objectives Determine tangent lines to functions for a given point Compute the slope of curves Compute Instantaneous rate of change.
Rates of Change and Tangent Lines Chapter 2.4. Average Rates of Change 2.
Section 1.4 The Tangent and Velocity Problems. WHAT IS A TANGENT LINE TO THE GRAPH OF A FUNCTION? A line l is said to be a tangent to a curve at a point.
Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Prentice Hall 2.4 Rates of Change and Tangent Lines.
Section 2.4 Rates of Change and Tangent Lines Calculus.
Rates of Change and Tangent Lines Devil’s Tower, Wyoming.
Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Prentice Hall Slide 2- 1.
Chapter 10 Limits and the Derivative
2.4 Rates of Change and Tangent Lines
Rates of Change and Tangent Lines
2.4 Rates of Change and Tangent Lines
Warm Up a) What is the average rate of change from x = -2 to x = 2? b) What is the average rate of change over the interval [1, 4]? c) Approximate y’(2).
2-4 Rates of change & tangent lines
Tangent Lines and Rates of Change
Rate of change and tangent lines
2.4 Rates of Change & Tangent Lines
Rates of Change and Limits
Implicit Differentiation
Sec 2.7: Derivative and Rates of Change
Bell-Ringer.
Lesson 2-4: Rates of Change
Derivative of a Function
Rates of Change and Tangent Lines
The Tangent and Velocity Problems
Section 1 Displacement and Velocity
Packet #4 Definition of the Derivative
Definite Integrals and Antiderivatives
Implicit Differentiation
Implicit Differentiation
Drill: Find the limit of each of the following.
2.4 Rates of Change & Tangent Lines
Rates of Change and Tangent Lines
30 – Instantaneous Rate of Change No Calculator
Velocity and Other Rates of Change
Velocity and Other Rates of Change
Drill: Find the limit of each of the following.
Definite Integrals & Antiderivatives
Rates of Change and Limits
Rates of Change & Tangent Lines Day 1
Implicit Differentiation
Sec 2.7: Derivative and Rates of Change
Velocity and Other Rates of Change
Presentation transcript:

Rates of Change and Tangent Lines Chapter 2 Limits and Continuity Section 2.4 Rates of Change and Tangent Lines

What you’ll learn about Tangent lines Slopes of curves Instantaneous rate of change Sensitivity …and why The tangent line determines the direction of a body’s motion at every point along its path

Average Rates of Change The average rate of change of a quantity over a period of time is the amount of change divided by the time it takes. In general, the average rate of change of a function over an interval is the amount of change divided by the length of the interval. Also, the average rate of change can be thought of as the slope of a secant line to a curve.

Example Average Rates of Change

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.

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.

Example Tangent to a Curve

Example Tangent to a Curve

Slope of a Curve To find the tangent to a curve y = f (x) at a point P(a,f (a)) calculate the slope of the secant line through P and a point Q(a+h, f (a+h)). Next, investigate the limit of the slope as h→0. If the limit exists, it is the slope of the curve at P and we define the tangent at P to be the line through P with this slope.

Slope of a Curve

Slope of a Curve at a Point

Slope of a Curve

Normal to a Curve The normal line to a curve at a point is the line perpendicular to the tangent at the point. The slope of the normal line is the negative reciprocal of the slope of the tangent line.

Example Normal to a Curve

Speed Revisited

Sensitivity We live in an interconnected world where changes in one quantity cause changes in another. For example, crop yields per acre depend on rainfall. If rainfall has been low, each small increase in the amount of rain creates a small increase in crop yield. For a drug that works to lower a patient’s temperature, each small increase in the amount of the drug will lower the temperature a small amount.

Sensitivity The mathematical connection between such changes is known as sensitivity. Sensitivity describes how one variable responds to small changes in another variable. If we let T denote the patient’s temperature and D the dosage, then the sensitivity is given by

Quick Quiz Sections 2.3 and 2.4

Quick Quiz Sections 2.3 and 2.4

Quick Quiz Sections 2.3 and 2.4

Quick Quiz Sections 2.3 and 2.4

Quick Quiz Sections 2.3 and 2.4

Quick Quiz Sections 2.3 and 2.4

Chapter Test

Chapter Test

Chapter Test

Chapter Test

Chapter Test

Chapter Test

Chapter Test Solutions

Chapter Test Solutions

Chapter Test Solutions

Chapter Test Solutions

Chapter Test Solutions

Chapter Test Solutions

Chapter Test Solutions

Chapter Test Solutions