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Calculus I (MAT 145) Dr. Day Wednesday, October 17, 2018
Derivative Applications (Chapter 4) Extreme Values of a Function (4.1) More Information From the First Derivative (4.3) What does the Second Derivative Tell Us? (4.3) Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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What does f’ tell us about f?
If f’(c)= 0, there is a horizontal tangent to the curve at x=c. This may mean there is a local max or min at x=c. If f’(c) is undefined, there could be a discontinuity, a vertical tangent, or a cusp (sharp point) at x=c. If f(x) is continuous at x=c, there may be a local max or min at x=c. Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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First derivative test Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Info about f from f ’ Here’s a graph of g’(x). Determine all intervals over which g is increasing and over which g is decreasing. Identify and justify where all local extremes occur. Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Concavity of a Function
Concavity Animations More Concavity Animations Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Concavity of a Function
Concavity Animations More Concavity Animations Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Inflection Point Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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What does f’’ tell us about f?
If f’’(c)> 0, then the original curve f(x) is concave up at x=c. If f’’(c)< 0, then the original curve f(x) is concave down at x=c. If f’’(c)= 0, then f(x) is neither concave up nor concave down at x=c. And there could be an inflection point on f(x) at x=c. If f’’(c) is undefined, there could be a discontinuity, a vertical tangent, or a cusp (sharp point) in f’(x) at x=c. There may be a change of concavity in f(x) at x=c. Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Info about f from f ’’ Here’s a graph of h”(x). Determine all intervals over which h is concave up and over which h is concave down. Identify and justify where all points of inflection occur. Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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First Derivative Test, Concavity, Second Derivative Test (Sec. 4.3)
Determining Increasing or Decreasing Nature of a Function If f’(x) > 0, then f is _?_. If f’(x) < 0, then f is _?_. Using the First Derivative to Determine Whether an Extreme Value Exists: The First Derivative Test (and first derivative sign charts) If f’ changes from positive to negative at x=c, then f has a _?_ _?_ at c. If f’ changes from negative to positive at x=c, then f has a _?_ _?_ at c. If f’ does not change sign at x=c, then f has neither a local max or min at c. Concavity of f If f’’(x) > 0 for all x in some interval I, then the graph is concave up on I. If f’’(x) < 0 for all x in some interval I, then the graph is concave down on I. Second derivative Test If f’(c) = 0 and f’’(c) > 0, then f has a local min at c. If f’(c) = 0 and f’’(c) < 0, then f has a local max at c. Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Pulling it all together
For f(x) shown below, use calculus to determine and justify: All x-axis intervals for which f is increasing All x-axis intervals for which f is decreasing The location and value of every local & absolute extreme All x-axis intervals for which f is concave up All x-axis intervals for which f is concave down The location of every point of inflection. Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Absolute and Relative Extremes
Ways to Find Extrema Local Extremes: examine behavior at critical points Absolute Extremes: examine behavior at critical points and at endpoints Example Determine critical numbers, absolute extrema, and relative extrema for the unrestricted function (all possible domain values) and then for the restricted domain [−1,3]. Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Absolute and Relative Extremes
Absolute (Global) Extreme: An output of a function such that it is either the greatest (maximum) or the least (minimum) of all possible outputs. Relative (Local) Extreme: An output of a function such that it is either the greatest (maximum) or the least (minimum) in some small neighborhood along the x-axis. Extreme Value Theorem: For f(x) continuous on a closed interval, there must be extreme values. If f is continuous on a closed interval [a,b] then f attains an absolute maximum value f(c) and an absolute minimum value f(d) at some numbers c and d in [a,b]. Fermat’s Theorem: If f has a local max or min at x = c and if f ’(c) exists then f ’(c) = 0. Critical Point: An interior point (not an endpoint) on f(x) with f ’(x) = 0 or f ’(x) undefined. Note: The function MUST EXIST at x = c for a critical point to exist at x = c. Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Absolute (global) Extremes and Relative (local) Extremes
Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Absolute Extrema—Closed Interval Method
Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Absolute and Relative Extremes
Ways to Find Extrema Local Extremes: examine behavior at critical points Absolute Extremes: examine behavior at critical points and at endpoints Example Determine critical numbers, absolute extrema, and relative extrema for the unrestricted function (all possible domain values) and then for the restricted domain [−1,3]. Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Absolute (Global) Extrema
In the graph, the Absolute (Global) Maximum is 5 (y-value) and is found at x = 3. The value 5 is the greatest value of the function over its entire domain [1,7]. The Absolute (Global) Minimum is 2 and is found at x = 6. The value 2 is the least value of the Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Absolute Extrema What is the absolute maximum in the graph? (This means “Tell me the greatest y-value.”) Where is the absolute maximum located? (This means, “Tell me the x-value that corresponds to the maximum y-value.”) What is the absolute minimum in the graph? Where is the absolute minimum located? What do you notice about the locations of absolute extrema? Where could they occur? Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Relative (Local) Extrema
In the graph, Relative (Local) Maxima are: f(b) (y-value) found at x=b f(d) (y-value) found at x=d These values are greater than all the other y-values in a small neighborhood immediately to the right and left. The Relative (Local) Minima are: f(c) (y-value) found at x=c f(e) (y-value) found at x=e These values are less than all the other y-values nearby. Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Relative (Local) Extrema
Where could relative extrema occur? Critical numbers are the locations where local extrema could occur. Critical points are the points (x- and y-values) that describe both the locations and function values at those points. Determine critical numbers for Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Fermat’s Theorem Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Absolute Extrema Where and what are the absolute and local extrema?
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Absolute Extrema Where and what are the absolute and local extrema?
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Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Absolute and Relative Maximums and Minimums
Use the graph of f ’(x) to describe a strategy for identifying the global and local extrema of f, knowing f ’(x). m a t h Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Absolute and Relative Maximums and Minimums
Must every continuous function have critical points on a closed interval? Explain. Can an increasing function have a local max? Explain. Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Identify Extrema From a Graph
Graph each function. Identify all global and local extremes. For each of those, write a sentence based on this template: At x = ?, there is a (local/global) (max/min) of y = ? Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Identify Extrema From a Graph
At x = 1 there is a global max of 5. At x = 4 there is a global min of 3. At x = 0 there is a global max of 4. There is no global min. At x = -1 there is a global min of 1/e. There is no global max. Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Determine the Critical Numbers
For each function, determine every critical number. Unless otherwise restricted, assume that each function’s domain includes all possible values for which that function is defined. Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Determine the Critical Numbers
For each function, determine every critical number. Unless otherwise restricted, assume that each function’s domain includes all possible values for which that function is defined. Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Identify Extrema Using Critical Numbers
For each function, determine every critical number, and then use those critical numbers to determine all absolute extreme values. Note the domain restrictions. For each extreme value, write a sentence based on this template: At x = _?_, there is an absolute (max/min) of _?_. Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Identify Extrema Using Critical Numbers
At x = √8 there is a global max of 8. At x = −1 there is a global min of −√15. At x = −2 there is a global max of 92. At x = 3 there is a global min of −158. At x = 1 there is a global max of 1. At x = 0 there is a global min of 0. Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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Absolute and Relative Extremes
Ways to Find Extrema Local Extremes: Examine behavior at critical points. Absolute Extremes: Examine behavior at critical points and at endpoints. Example Determine critical numbers, absolute extrema, and relative extrema for the unrestricted function (all possible domain values) and then for the restricted domain [−3,1]. Wednesday, Oct 17, 2018 MAT 145
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