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Find the intervals where f(x) is increasing or decreasing: √x -2x. Ans: increasing (0, 1/4) Decreasing (1/4, ∞)

User Xanatos
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18 votes

Answer:


\textsf{Increasing function}: \quad \left[0, (1)/(16)\right)


\textsf{Decreasing function}: \quad \left((1)/(16), \infty\right)

Explanation:

Given function:


f(x)=√(x)-2x

As a negative number cannot be square rooted, the domain of the function is restricted to [0, ∞).


\textsf{A function is \textbf{increasing} when the \underline{gradient is positive}}\implies f'(x) > 0


\textsf{A function is \textbf{decreasing} when the \underline{gradient is negative}} \implies f'(x) < 0

Differentiating produces an algebraic expression for the gradient as a function of x. Therefore, differentiate the given function:


\begin{aligned}f(x) &amp; = √(x)-2x\\&amp; = x^{(1)/(2)}-2x\\\implies f'(x) &amp; = (1)/(2)x^{\left((1)/(2)-1\right)}-2x^((1-1))\\ &amp; = (1)/(2)x^{-(1)/(2)}-2x^0\\ &amp; = (1)/(2√(x))-2\end{aligned}

Increasing function

To find the interval where f(x) is increasing, set the differentiated function to more than zero and solve for x:


\begin{aligned}f'(x) &amp; > 0\\\implies (1)/(2√(x))-2 &amp; > 0\\(1)/(2√(x)) &amp; > 2\\\ (1)/(2) &amp; > 2√(x)\\(1)/(2 \cdot 2) &amp; > √(x)\\ (1)/(4) &amp; > √(x)\\ √(x) &amp; < (1)/(4)\\\left(√(x)\right)^2 &amp; < \left((1)/(4)\right)^2\\ x &amp; < (1)/(16)\end{aligned}

As the domain is restricted, the function is increasing when:


\textsf{Solution}: \quad 0 \leq x < (1)/(16)


\textsf{Interval notation}: \quad \left[0, (1)/(16)\right)

Decreasing function

To find the interval where f(x) is decreasing, set the differentiated function to less than zero and solve for x:


\begin{aligned}f'(x) &amp; < 0\\\implies (1)/(2√(x))-2 &amp; < 0\\(1)/(2√(x)) &amp; < 2\\\ (1)/(2) &amp; < 2√(x)\\(1)/(2 \cdot 2) &amp; < √(x)\\ (1)/(4) &amp; < √(x)\\ √(x) &amp; > (1)/(4)\\\left(√(x)\right)^2 &amp; > \left((1)/(4)\right)^2\\ x &amp; > (1)/(16)\end{aligned}

Therefore, the function is decreasing when:


\textsf{Solution}: \quad x > (1)/(16)


\textsf{Interval notation}: \quad \left((1)/(16), \infty\right)

Note: The answer quoted in the original question is incorrect for the quoted function (please refer to the attached graph for proof).

Differentiation Rules


\boxed{\begin{minipage}{4.8 cm}\underline{Differentiating $ax^n$}\\\\If $y=ax^n$, then $\frac{\text{d}y}{\text{d}x}=nax^(n-1)$\\\end{minipage}}

Find the intervals where f(x) is increasing or decreasing: √x -2x. Ans: increasing-example-1
User Hoja
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