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astroman

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stuck on a question, getting confused :/

Differentiate, find the stationary point on the curve, giving the exact value.
 

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stuck on a question, getting confused :/

Differentiate, find the stationary point on the curve, giving the exact value.
What do you mean by giving exact value?
Does it want the x coordinate or the y coordinate or both?

You differentiate.
Stationary points occur when first derivative = 0.
Solve for x. That is your x value.
Sub into original equation and you get a y value.
Coordinates of stationary point is (x,y)
Not sure what the question means about value, it's vague.
 

astroman

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the questions says exactly: differentiate . Hence find the stationary point on the curve, giving the exact value.

question from EX 2.1 - 14, MIF Ext1
 

Drongoski

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Now find the co-ords of the stationary point.
 
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Smile12345

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Use the basic product rule... y = vu' + uv' and you will get what the first part of the answer is.

Then you need to put the two over a common denominator and you will get the next part of the answer.

Then as user 'Faisalabdul16' said:
"Stationary points occur when first derivative = 0.
Solve for x. That is your x value.
Sub into original equation and you get a y value.
Coordinates of stationary point is (x,y)"

You should get the co-ordinate as given. :)
 

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