Answered

Welcome to Westonci.ca, the Q&A platform where your questions are met with detailed answers from experienced experts. Experience the ease of finding quick and accurate answers to your questions from professionals on our platform. Connect with a community of professionals ready to provide precise solutions to your questions quickly and accurately.

Condition for increasing decreasing and concavity of function

Sagot :

Answer:

If the concavity of f changes at a point (c,f(c)), then f′ is changing from increasing to decreasing (or, decreasing to increasing) at x=c. That means that the sign of f″ is changing from positive to negative (or, negative to positive) at x=c. This leads to the following theorem

Step-by-step explanation:

The previous section showed how the first derivative of a function,  f′ , can relay important information about  f . We now apply the same technique to  f′  itself, and learn what this tells us about  f . The key to studying  f′  is to consider its derivative, namely  f′′ , which is the second derivative of  f . When  f′′>0 ,  f′  is increasing. When  f′′<0 ,  f′  is decreasing.  f′  has relative maxima and minima where  f′′=0  or is undefined. This section explores how knowing information about  f′′

Let  f  be differentiable on an interval  I . The graph of  f  is concave up on  I  if  f′  is increasing. The graph of  f  is concave down on  I  if  f′  is decreasing. If  f′  is constant then the graph of  f  is said to have no concavity.

Note: We often state that " f  is concave up" instead of "the graph of  f  is concave up" for simplicity.

The graph of a function  f  is concave up when  f′  is increasing. That means as one looks at a concave up graph from left to right, the slopes of the tangent lines will be increasing. Consider Figure  3.4.1 , where a concave up graph is shown along with some tangent lines. Notice how the tangent line on the left is steep, downward, corresponding to a small value of  f′ . On the right, the tangent line is steep, upward, corresponding to a large value of  f′ .

We appreciate your time. Please come back anytime for the latest information and answers to your questions. Thanks for using our platform. We aim to provide accurate and up-to-date answers to all your queries. Come back soon. Westonci.ca is committed to providing accurate answers. Come back soon for more trustworthy information.