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25 January, 13:47

Identify intervals on which the function is increasing, decreasing, or constant. g (x) = 4 - (x - 6) ^2?

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Answers (2)
  1. 25 January, 15:55
    0
    This is a parabola, so it's easier to look at the expression than to compute derivatives (and maybe you have not covered that topic yet or are not allowed to use them in this exercise).

    For x decreasing.

    At x = 6, it gets its maximum value.

    For x>6, the function goes from 4 to - infinity-> decreasing.
  2. 25 January, 17:45
    0
    Taking the derivative will give you the velocity at any time.

    g (x) = 4 - (x-6) ^2

    g (x) = 4 - (x^2-12x+36)

    g (x) = 4-x^2+12x-36

    g (x) = - x^2+12x-32

    dg/dx=-2x+12

    So g (x) will be increasing when dg/dx>0

    -2x+12>0

    -2x>-12

    x<6

    So g (x) is increasing on the interval (-oo, 6)

    g (x) will be decreasing when dg/dx<0

    -2x+12<0

    -2x<-12

    x>6

    So g (x) will be decreasing on the interval (6, + oo)
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