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32 votes
32 votes
S 2. Let f(x) = x - k√x

a. Find a value of k such that the function has a critical point at x = 25.
b. Is the above critical point a local maximum, local minimum or neither? Show calculus to support your answer.​

User Jazaret
by
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1 Answer

16 votes
16 votes

a. A critical point at x = 25 would mean f'(25) = 0 or doesn't exist. We have derivative


f(x) = x - k \sqrt x \implies f'(x) = 1 - \frac k{2\sqrt x}

so that


f'(25) = 1 - \frac k{2√(25)} = 1 - \frac k{10} = 0 \implies \boxed{k=10}

b. Taking the second derivative, we get


f''(x) = \frac k{4 x^(3/2)} = \frac5{2 x^(3/2)}

At x = 25, the second derivative has a positive sign,


f''(25) = \frac 5{2 * 25^(3/2)} = \frac 5{2*5^3} = \frac1{50} > 0

which means f(x) is concave upward around x = 25, so this critical point is a local minimum.

User Daniel Nill
by
2.7k points
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