72.2k views
4 votes
Investigate the existence of a extrema value, what does the markered part mean?

Investigate the existence of a extrema value, what does the markered part mean?-example-1
User Naeg
by
8.2k points

1 Answer

3 votes

Answer: We have

f'(x) = a x + b,

f'(x) = 0 at x = -b/a

f(x) = a x^2 / 2 + b x + c


Meaning of marked part


❟ ∵ a<0 ❟ f is a quadratic function

∴ f has absolute maximum value at x = -b/a


For all a with a less than zero, f is a quadratic function. Therefore f has a global maximum at x = -b/a


That typesetting seems very sloppy. It probably is supposed to be


∀a < 0, f is a quadratic function.


The second sentence is sloppy in use of "absolute". It can't mean absolute value, so presumably it means "global".


Sometimes a minimum or maximum is only local, but a quadratic function has exactly one extrema, and it is global. And if a < 0, the extrema is a global maximum.


Explanation:


An extrema (minimum or maximum) for f(x) occurs only where f'(x) = 0, that is, when the slope of the tangent at x is zero.


But if the function crosses its tangent at that point, the point is an inflection point, not an extrema. A quadratic never crosses it's tangent.


User Yoraco Gonzales
by
8.4k points

No related questions found

Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.

9.4m questions

12.2m answers

Categories