differentiation of exponentials question (1 Viewer)

kloudsurfer

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Hey,
A couple of questions like this have popped up and i dont know how to do them. Could anyone help me?

Find the stationary point on the curve y=xe^x and determine its nature.

Thanks in advance.
 

imaginarylife

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y = x e^x

using product rule, dy/dx = x e^x + e^x
stationary point when dy/dx = 0
e^x(x +1) = 0
e^x cannot = 0, therefore stat. pt. when x = -1

to determine its nature use second derivative or test points either side
by product rule,
y"= e^x(x+1) + e^x
= e^x(x+2)
for x= -1, y" is positive
therefore it is concave up
therefore min. turning point at (-1, -e^-1)
 
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jb_nc

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kloudsurfer said:
As x -> minus infinity, y -> a tiny positive number. It's never 0.
 

aussiechica7

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hehe i think something like that question was in my methods exam (2003)
 

kloudsurfer

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ellen.louise said:
Because x=0 is the assymptote for the curve: no value you ever put in for x in y=e^x will ever equal 0 or a neg. number.
Oh right...

Ok really I have no idea.

Why is x=0 the asymptote again?

I think I have to go over some yr 11 stuff...
 

idling fire

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ellen.louise said:
Because x=0 is the assymptote for the curve
Uhm... no... incorrect.
The second part was right though:
ellen.louise said:
no value you ever put in for x in y=e^x will ever equal 0 or a neg. number.
x CAN equal zero. Domain for x is all real numbers.
y CANNOT equal zero, because no value of x can ever make the RHS zero.
Therefore asymptote is y=0 (the x-axis) for y=e^x.
 

ellen.louise

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kloudsurfer said:
Oh right...

Ok really I have no idea.

Why is x=0 the asymptote again?

I think I have to go over some yr 11 stuff...
because it just is...
um...
oooh! got it!!!!

because if y=e^x, x=logey. and.... and.... someone help here!!!

NO I WAS WRONG!!! it's for the log curve that x=0 is the assymptote. (I probably should have checked my trusty template earlier)

for y=e^x, y=0 is the assymptote, because x=log e y and you cannot find the log of a negative number, and you can't multiply anything by a power that comes to 0. :)
 

kloudsurfer

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ellen.louise said:
for y=e^x, y=0 is the assymptote, because x=log e y and you cannot find the log of a negative number, and you can't multiply anything by a power that comes to 0. :)
:confused:

Still confused.

Will this make sense further into the topic? Because we havent even learnt about logs yet, we are only up to differentiation of exponentials.
 

bos1234

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To find the x-intercept sub in y=0 and solve

y=e^x
0=e^x


if you draw the exponential curve y = e^x you will see that it never touches or goes below the x-axis. So the x-axis is an asymptote so the above equation cannot be solved

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Also you can do this by above to see it has no soln.

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hope u understood

thanks bye
 

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