Unit 5 - Analytical Applications of Differentiation
Mean value theorem states that if f is continuous on the closed interval and differentiable on the open interval, there is at least one point where the instantaneous rate of change is equal to the average rate of change
Extreme value theorem states that if f is continuous on the closed interval, then it has an absolute maximum and an absolute minimum on the interval
There are two places where an extreme value can occur -- a critical point or an endpoint
Compare the local extrema to find the global extrema
Critical values are when the derivative is 0 or the derivative doesn’t exist
If the sign changes from positive to negative, it’s a relative maximum
If the sign changes from negative to positive, it’s a relative minimum
First derivative test is when you plug intermediate values between the critical points into the derivative to test for a sign change
Concave up is when the rate of change over an interval is increasing (getting more steep)
Concave down is when the rate of change of over an interval is decreasing (getting less steep)
If the second derivative is positive, then the function is concave up at that point
If the second derivative is negative, then the function is concave down at that point
Points of inflection are where the function switches concavity (the second derivative of this point will be 0)
If a local extrema is concave up, it is a minimum
If a local extrema is concave down, it is a maximum
Find a relationship between two variables to get rid of one
Then find the derivative
Then find the local minimum/maximum based on the question
Mean value theorem states that if f is continuous on the closed interval and differentiable on the open interval, there is at least one point where the instantaneous rate of change is equal to the average rate of change
Extreme value theorem states that if f is continuous on the closed interval, then it has an absolute maximum and an absolute minimum on the interval
There are two places where an extreme value can occur -- a critical point or an endpoint
Compare the local extrema to find the global extrema
Critical values are when the derivative is 0 or the derivative doesn’t exist
If the sign changes from positive to negative, it’s a relative maximum
If the sign changes from negative to positive, it’s a relative minimum
First derivative test is when you plug intermediate values between the critical points into the derivative to test for a sign change
Concave up is when the rate of change over an interval is increasing (getting more steep)
Concave down is when the rate of change of over an interval is decreasing (getting less steep)
If the second derivative is positive, then the function is concave up at that point
If the second derivative is negative, then the function is concave down at that point
Points of inflection are where the function switches concavity (the second derivative of this point will be 0)
If a local extrema is concave up, it is a minimum
If a local extrema is concave down, it is a maximum
Find a relationship between two variables to get rid of one
Then find the derivative
Then find the local minimum/maximum based on the question