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2.1E: Exercises

  • Page ID
    10628
  • This page is a draft and is under active development. 

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    Exercise \(\PageIndex{1}\)

    For the following functions, use the definition of a derivative to find \(f′(x)\). You may use derivative rules (will be learned in the next section to check if your answer is correct.

    1) \(f(x)=6\)

    2) \(f(x)=2−3x\)

    3) \(f(x)=\frac{2x}{7}+1\)

    4) \(f(x)=4x^2\)

    5) \(f(x)=5x−x^2\)

    6) \(f(x)=\sqrt{2x}\)

    7) \(f(x)=\sqrt{x−6}\)

    8) \(f(x)=\frac{9}{x}\)

    9) \(f(x)=x+\frac{1}{x}\)

    10) \(f(x)=\frac{1}{\sqrt{x}}\)

    Answer

    Under Construction

    Exercise \(\PageIndex{2}\)

    For the following exercises, use the graph of \(y=f(x)\) to sketch the graph of its derivative \(f′(x).\).

    1)

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    2)

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    3)

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    4)

    alt

    Answers to even numbered questions

    2.

    alt

    4.

    alt

    Exercise \(\PageIndex{3}\)

    For the following exercises, the given limit represents the derivative of a function \(y=f(x)\) at \(x=a\). Find \(f(x)\) and \(a\).

    1) \(lim_{h→0}\frac{(1+h)^{2/3}−1}{h}\)

    2) \(lim_{h→0}\frac{[3(2+h)^2+2]−14}{h}\)

    3) \(lim_{h→0}\frac{cos(π+h)+1}{h}\)

    4) \(lim_{h→0}\frac{(2+h)^4−16}{h}\)

    5) \(lim_{h→0}\frac{[2(3+h)^2−(3+h)]−15}{h}\)

    6) \(lim_{h→0}\frac{e^h−1}{h}\)

    Answers to even numbered questions

    2. \(f(x)=3x^2+2, a=2\)

    4. \(f(x)=x^4, a=2\)

    6. \(f(x)=e^x, a=0\)

    Exercise \(\PageIndex{4}\)

    For the following functions,

    a. sketch the graph and

    b. use the definition of a derivative to show that the function is not differentiable at \(x=1\)

    1) \(f(x)=\begin{cases}2\sqrt{x} & 0≤x≤1\\3x−1 & x>1\end{cases}\)

    2) \(f(x)=\begin{cases}3 & x<1\\3x & x≥1\end{cases}\)

    3) \(f(x)=\begin{cases}−x^2+2 & x≤1\\x & x>1\end{cases}\)

    4) \(f(x)=\begin{cases}2x, & x≤1\\\frac{2}{x} & x>1\end{cases}\)

    Answers to even numbered questions

    2a.

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    b. \(lim_{h→1^−}\frac{3−3}{h}≠lim_{h→1^+}\frac{3h}{h}\)

    4a.

    The function starts in the third quadrant as a straight line and passes through the origin with slope 2; then at (1, 2) it decreases convexly as 2/x.

    b. \(lim_{h→1^−}\frac{2h}{h}≠lim_{h→1^+}\frac{\frac{2}{x+h}−2x}{h}.\)

    Exercise \(\PageIndex{5}\)

    For the following graphs,

    a. determine for which values of \(x=a\) the \(lim_{x→a}f(x)\) exists but \(f\) is not continuous at \(x=a\), and

    b. determine for which values of \(x=a\) the function is continuous but not differentiable at \(x=a\).

    1)

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    2)

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    Answer

    2. \(a. x=1, b. x=2\)

    Exercise \(\PageIndex{6}\)

    Use the graph to evaluate \(a. f′(−0.5), b. f′(0), c. f′(1), d. f′(2),\) and e. \(f′(3),\) if it exists.

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    Answer

    Under Construction

    Exercise \(\PageIndex{7}\)

    For the following exercises, describe what the two expressions represent in terms of each of the given situations. Be sure to include units.

    a. \(\frac{f(x+h)−f(x)}{h}\)

    b. \(f′(x)=lim_{h→0}\frac{f(x+h)−f(x)}{h}\)

    1) \(P(x)\) denotes the population of a city at time \(x\) in years.

    2) \(C(x)\) denotes the total amount of money (in thousands of dollars) spent on concessions by \(x\) customers at an amusement park.

    3) \(R(x)\) denotes the total cost (in thousands of dollars) of manufacturing \(x\) clock radios

    4) \(g(x)\) denotes the grade (in percentage points) received on a test, given \(x\) hours of studying.

    5) \(B(x) \)denotes the cost (in dollars) of a sociology textbook at university bookstores in the United States in \(x\) years since \(1990\).

    6) \(p(x)\) denotes atmospheric pressure at an altitude of \(x\) feet.

    Answers to even numbered questions

    2a. Average rate at which customers spent on concessions in thousands per customer.

    b. Rate (in thousands per customer) at which \(x\) customers spent money on concessions in thousands per customer.

    4a. Average grade received on the test with an average study time between two values.

    b. Rate (in percentage points per hour) at which the grade on the test increased or decreased for a given average study time of \(x\) hours.

    6a. Average change of atmospheric pressure between two different altitudes.

    b. Rate (torr per foot) at which atmospheric pressure is increasing or decreasing at \(x\) feet.

    Exercise \(\PageIndex{8}\)

    Sketch the graph of a function \(y=f(x)\) with all of the following properties:

    a. \(f′(x)>0\) for \(−2≤x<1\)

    b. \(f′(2)=0\)

    c. \(f′(x)>0\) for \(x>2\)

    d. \(f(2)=2\) and \(f(0)=1\)

    e. \(lim_{x→−∞}f(x)=0\) and \(lim_{x→∞}f(x)=∞\)

    f. \(f′(1)\) does not exist.

    Answer
    Under Construction

    Exercise \(\PageIndex{9}\)

    Suppose temperature T in degrees Fahrenheit at a height \(x\) in feet above the ground is given by \(y=T(x).\)

    a. Give a physical interpretation, with units, of \(T′(x).\)

    b. If we know that \(T′(1000)=−0.1,\) explain the physical meaning.

    Answer

    a. The rate (in degrees per foot) at which temperature is increasing or decreasing for a given height \(x.\)

    b. The rate of change of temperature as altitude changes at \(1000\) feet is \(−0.1\) degrees per foot.

    Exercise \(\PageIndex{10}\)

    Suppose the total profit of a company is \(y=P(x)\) thousand dollars when \(x\) units of an item are sold.

    a. What does \(\frac{P(b)−P(a)}{b−a}\) for \(0<a<b\) measure, and what are the units?

    b. What does \(P′(x)\) measure, and what are the units?

    c. Suppose that \(P′(30)=5\), what is the approximate change in profit if the number of items sold increases from \(30\) to \(31\)?

    Answer

    Under Construction

    Exercise \(\PageIndex{11}\)

    The graph in the following figure models the number of people \(N(t)\) who have come down with the flu t weeks after its initial outbreak in a town with a population of 50,000 citizens.

    a. Describe what \(N′(t)\) represents and how it behaves as \(t\) increases.

    b. What does the derivative tell us about how this town is affected by the flu outbreak?

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    Answer

    a. The rate at which the number of people who have come down with the flu is changing t weeks after the initial outbreak.

    b. The rate is increasing sharply up to the third week, at which point it slows down and then becomes constant.

    Exercise \(\PageIndex{12}\)

    For the following exercises, use the following table, which shows the height \(h\) of the Saturn \(V\) rocket for the Apollo \(11\) mission \(t\) seconds after launch.

    \(Time(seconds)\) \(Height(meters)\)
    0 0
    1 2
    2 4
    3 13
    4 25
    5 32

    1) What is the physical meaning of \(h′(t)\)? What are the units?

    2) Construct a table of values for \(h′(t)\) and graph both \(h(t)\) and \(h′(t)\) on the same graph. (Hint: for interior points, estimate both the left limit and right limit and average them.)

    3) The best linear fit to the data is given by \(H(t)=7.229t−4.905\), where \(H\) is the height of the rocket (in meters) and t is the time elapsed since takeoff. From this equation, determine \(H′(t)\). Graph \(H(t\) with the given data and, on a separate coordinate plane, graph \(H′(t).\)

    4) The best quadratic fit to the data is given by \(G(t)=1.429t^2+0.0857t−0.1429,\) where \(G\) is the height of the rocket (in meters) and \(t\) is the time elapsed since takeoff. From this equation, determine \(G′(t)\). Graph \(G(t)\) with the given data and, on a separate coordinate plane, graph \(G′(t).\)

    5) The best cubic fit to the data is given by \(F(t)=0.2037t^3+2.956t^2−2.705t+0.4683\), where \(F\) is the height of the rocket (in m) and \(t\) is the time elapsed since take off. From this equation, determine \(F′(t)\). Graph \(F(t)\) with the given data and, on a separate coordinate plane, graph \(F′(t)\). Does the linear, quadratic, or cubic function fit the data best?

    6) Using the best linear, quadratic, and cubic fits to the data, determine what \(H''(t),G''(t) and F''(t)\) are. What are the physical meanings of \(H''(t),G''(t )and F''(t),\) and what are their units?

    Answers to even numbered questions

    2.

    \(Time(seconds)\) \(h′(t)(m/s)\)
    0 2
    1 2
    2 5.5
    3 10.5
    4 9.5
    5 7
    4. \(G′(t)=2.858t+0.0857\)
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    6. \(H''(t)=0,G''(t)=2.858 and f''(t)=1.222t+5.912\) represent the acceleration of the rocket, with units of meters per second squared \((m/s2).\)

    Contributors and Attributions

    • Gilbert Strang (MIT) and Edwin “Jed” Herman (Harvey Mudd) with many contributing authors. This content by OpenStax is licensed with a CC-BY-SA-NC 4.0 license. Download for free at http://cnx.org.


    2.1E: Exercises is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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