All Calculus 1 Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #2494 : Calculus
As a mathematician, you run a quick analysis of your friends business and find out that his profits vary depending on the price of one particular good. His profit can be written as where is the profit and is the price of the good. Their relationship is written as . Your friend wants to know at which price he should set his good to make the highest profit.
(Hint: What can we use from calculus to maximize ?)
Finding the highest profits can be done by maximizing . This is possible by finding it's derivative and setting it equal to zero. After doing this, we can see that because , we can now solve for our answer,.
Example Question #21 : How To Find Local Maximum Graphing Functions Of Curves
One can find local (or absolute) maximum and minimum values of a differentiable function using calculus. Upon taking a function's derrivative, there may be points at which the derrivative is zero. These points indicate critical points (local or absolute max, min or, sometimes, an inflection point).
Find the critical point(s) of the function .
We take the derivative:
To find the critical points, we set
Solving for x using the quadratic formula:
Which is our answer
Example Question #22 : Graphing Functions
One can find local (or absolute) maximum and minimum values of a differentiable function using calculus. Upon taking a function's derrivative, there may be points at which the derrivative is zero. These points indicate critical points (local or absolute max, min or, sometimes, an inflection point).
Where does the function achieve a local maximum when ?
Take the derivative of the function:
To find critical points, we set dy/dx = 0
or, equivalently,
The first couple points at which this is true are
.
These are both local maxima, but only fulfils the condition
. Hence, is our answer.
Example Question #22 : How To Find Local Maximum Graphing Functions Of Curves
One can find local (or absolute) maximum and minimum values of a differentiable function using calculus. Upon taking a function's derrivative, there may be points at which the derrivative is zero. These points indicate critical points (local or absolute max, min or, sometimes, an inflection point).
Where does the function achieve a local minimum when .
To find the critical points, we allow .
We notice right away that is a critical point but it is not between 0 and 2.
we also notice that is a critical point also. It is, indeed, between 0 and 2. The next possible critical point is which is greater than 2. Evaluating the function at the two points suggests that the function is a minimum at . Hence, it is our answer.
Example Question #25 : How To Find Local Maximum Graphing Functions Of Curves
Find the x-values of the local maxima (if any) of the function
The function has no local maxima.
The function has no local maxima.
To find local extrema (if any), set the derivative equal to 0 and solve for .
Here, , so .
However, this function is a parabola (since it is quadratic) and concave up (since the coefficient of the quadratic term is positive), and therefore has no local maximum -- only a local minimum.
Example Question #26 : How To Find Local Maximum Graphing Functions Of Curves
Find the x-coordinates of the local maxima (if any) of the function
To find local extrema, use the first derivative test.
Here, , so or .
Test points in each of the intervals defined by those potential extrema. For example, (increasing), (decreasing), and (increasing).
Since the function increases up to , then decreases, is a local maximum. (For completeness, is a local minimum, not a maximum.)
Example Question #27 : How To Find Local Maximum Graphing Functions Of Curves
Find the local maximum of the function .
To find a local maximum of a function, we need to find where the slope of the function changes from positive to negative. This is a point at which the output (the y-value in this case) has increased as much as it can (in the local area of the graph), and just after which the value will decrease.
The slope of this point must be zero, since, if the function is continuous, the slope must be zero when shifting from a positive value to a negative value.
To find where the slope of the function is zero, we will find the derivative of the function, and set it equal to zero:
To solve for the x-values that make this statement true (in other words, to find the x-values at which the slope equals zero), we can use the quadratic formula:
having a slope of zero simply means that a value is eligible to be a local maximum or minimum, however. To determine which value is the maximum and which is the minimum, we will plug in numbers into y' on either side of -3*.
So, before x=-3, the slope of the function is positive, and after, the slope is negative. This means that the slope changes from postivie to negative at x=-3. Therefore, The local maximum of the function is found at x=-3.
*Note that we could just as easily plug in numbers on either side of -1/3. Doing this would simply show that the slope is positive before x=-1/3 and positive after it, meaning that there is a local minimum at x=-1/3.
Example Question #24 : Graphing Functions
What is the local maximum of ?
To find the local max of this function, you have to first find the derivative so you cna test values and see what's going with the slope. To find the derivative, take your exponent and multiply it by the leading coefficient and then reduce the exponent by 1. Therefore, your derivative function is: . Then, set that equal to 0 to get your critical points. . Then, set up a number line and test the regions between each critical point. When you pick a test value, plug it into the derivative function. To the left of , the function has a positive slope. Then, after , it becomes negative. After 0, it turns positive again. A local max indicates that the slope went from positive to negative. This is occuring at .
Example Question #29 : How To Find Local Maximum Graphing Functions Of Curves
Determine the local maxima of the function:
The function is always decreasing
To determine the local maxima of the function, we must find the x-value(s) at which the first derivative of the function changes from positive to negative.
First, we must find the first derivative:
The derivative was found using the following rule:
Next, we must find the critical values, the values at which the first derivative is equal to zero:
Now, we must use the critical values to create the intervals on which we analyze whether the first derivative is positive or negative:
Note that at the bounds of the intervals the derivative is neither positive nor negative.
To check the sign of the first derivative, simply plug in any point on each interval into the first derivative function: on the first interval, the first derivative is positive, on the second it is negative, and on the third it is positive. The change from positive to negative happened from the first to second interval, so is the local maximum.
Example Question #21 : Graphing Functions
Find the x-coordinates of all the local maxima of
.
None of the other answers.
We need to differentiate term by term, applying the power rule,
This gives us
The critical points are the points where the derivative equals 0. To find those, we can use the quadratic formula:
Any local maximum will fall at a critical point where the derivative passes from positive to negative. To check this, we check a point in each of the intervals defined by the critical points:
.
Let's take -3 from the first interval, 0 from the second interval, and 2 from the third interval.
The derivative moves from positive to negative at -2, so that is the function's only local maximum.
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