StewartCalc7e 03 01
StewartCalc7e 03 01
3 Differentiation
Figure 3
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Maximum and Minimum Values
It’s not the absolute minimum because f (x) takes smaller
values when x is near 12 (in the interval K, for instance).
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Example 1
The function f (x) = cos x takes on its (local and absolute)
maximum value of 1 infinitely many times, since
cos 2n = 1 for any integer n and –1 cos x 1 for all x.
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Maximum and Minimum Values
The following theorem gives conditions under which a
function is guaranteed to possess extreme values.
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Maximum and Minimum Values
The Extreme Value Theorem is illustrated in Figure 7.
Figure 7
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Maximum and Minimum Values
Figures 8 and 9 show that a function need not possess
extreme values if either hypothesis (continuity or closed
interval) is omitted from the Extreme Value Theorem.
Figure 8 This function has minimum value Figure 9 This continuous function g has
f (2) = 0, but no maximum value. no maximum or minimum.
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Maximum and Minimum Values
The function f whose graph is shown in Figure 8 is defined
on the closed interval [0, 2] but has no maximum value.
[Notice that the range of f is [0, 3). The function takes on
values arbitrarily close to 3, but never actually attains the
value 3.]
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Maximum and Minimum Values
The function g shown in Figure 9 is continuous on the open
interval (0, 2) but has neither a maximum nor a minimum
value. [The range of g is (1, ). The function takes on
arbitrarily large values.]
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Maximum and Minimum Values
The Extreme Value Theorem says that a continuous
function on a closed interval has a maximum value and a
minimum value, but it does not tell us how to find these
extreme values. We start by looking for local extreme
values.
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Maximum and Minimum Values
It appears that at the maximum and minimum points the
tangent lines are horizontal and therefore each has slope 0.
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Example 5
If f (x) = x3, then f (x) = 3x2, so f (0) = 0.
Figure 11
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Example 5
The fact that f (0) = 0 simply means that the curve y = x3
has a horizontal tangent at (0, 0).
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Example 6
The function f (x) = | x | has its (local and absolute) minimum
value at 0, but that value can’t be found by setting f (x) = 0
because, f (0) does not exist. (see Figure 12)
Figure 12
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Maximum and Minimum Values
Fermat’s Theorem does suggest that we should at least
start looking for extreme values of f at the numbers c where
f (c) = 0 or where f (c) does not exist. Such numbers are
given a special name.
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Maximum and Minimum Values
To find an absolute maximum or minimum of a continuous
function on a closed interval, we note that either it is local
or it occurs at an endpoint of the interval.
Thus the following three-step procedure always works.
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