Title: Limits and Rates of Change
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Calculus I Mrs. Farber
What is Calculus?
2Two Basic Problems of Calculus
1. Find the slope of the curve y f (x) at the
point (x, f (x))
3Area
2. Find the area of the region bounded above by
the curve y f(x), below by the x-axis and by
the vertical lines x a and x b
y f(x)
x
a
b
4From BC (before calculus)
We can calculate the slope of a line given two
points
Calculate the slope of the line between the given
point P (.5, .5) and another point on the curve,
say Q(.1, .99). The line is called a secant line.
.
5Slope of Secant line PQ
P(0.5, 0.5)
Point Q
x f(x)
.1 .99
.2 .98
.3 .92
.4 .76
Let x values get closer and closer to .5.
Determine f(x) values.
6Slope of Secant line PQ
As Q gets closer to P, the Slope of the secant
line PQ Gets closer and closer to the slope Of
the line tangent to the Curve at P.
7Slope of a curve at a point
Figure 1.4 The tangent line at point P has the
same steepness (slope) that the curve has at P.
The slope of the curve at a point P is defined to
be the slope of the line that is tangent to the
curve at point P. In the figure the point is
P(0.5, 0.5)
8Slope formula
In calculus we learn how to calculate the slope
at a given point P. The strategy is to take use
secant lines with a second point Q. and find the
slope of the secant line. Continue by choosing
second points Q that are closer and closer to the
given point P and see if the difference quotient
gets closer to some fixed value.
.
9Slope
Find the slope of y x2 at the point (1,1) Find
the equation of the tangent line.
A
10Find slope of tangent line on f(x) x2 at the
point (1,1)
Approaching x 1 from the right
x f(x) Slope of secant between (1,1) and (x, f(x))
2 4 3
1.5 2.25 2.5
1.1 1.21 2.1
1.01 1.021 2.01
1.001 1.002001 2.001
Slope appears to be getting close to 2.
11Find slope of tangent line on f(x) x2 at the
point (1,1)
Approaching x 1 from the left
x f(x) Slope of secant between (1,1) and (x, f(x))
0 0 1
.5 .25 1.5
.9 .81 1.9
.99 .9801 1.99
.999 .998001 1.999
Slope appears to be getting close to 2.
12Write the equation of tangent line
- As the x value of the second point gets closer
and closer to 1, the slope gets closer and closer
to 2. We say the limit of the slopes of the
secant is 2. This is the slope of the tangent
line. - To write the equation of the tangent line use the
point-slope formula
13Average rate of change (from bc)
If f(t) represents the position of an object as a
function of time, then the rate of change is the
velocity of the object.
Find the average velocity if f (t) 2 cost
on 0, ?
1. Calculate the function value (position) at
each endpoint of the interval
f(?) 2 cos (?) 2 1 1
f(0) 2 cos (0) 2 1 3
2. Use the slope formula
The average velocity on on 0, ? is
14Instantaneous rate of change
To calculate the instantaneous rate of change of
we could not use the slope formula since we do
not have two points.
To approximate instantaneous calculate the
average rates of change in shorter and shorter
intervals to approximate the instantaneous rate
of change.
152.2
To understand the instantaneous rate of change
(slope) problem and the area problem, you will
need to learn about limits
16Limits
What happens to the value of f (x) when the value
of x gets closer and closer and closer (but not
necessarily equal) to 2?
- The answer can be found graphically, numerically
and analytically.
17Graphical Analysis
f (x)
x
What happens to f(x) as x gets closer to 2?
18Numerical Analysis
Use one sided limits
Start to the left of 2 and choose x values
getting closer and closer (but not equal) to 2
x
1.5
1.9
1.99
1.999
1.9999
f (x)
9.25
11.41
11.941
11.994001
11.99940001
Could x get closer to 2? Does f(x) appear to get
closer to a fixed number?
19Numerical Analysis
Start to the right of 2 and choose x values
getting closer and closer (but not equal ) to 2
x
2.5
2.1
2.01
2.001
2.0001
f (x)
15.3
12.61
12.0601
12.006001
12.00060001
If the limit exists, f(x) must approach the same
value from both directions. Does the limit exist?
Guess what it is.
20Limits that do not exist
Figure 1.8 The functions in Example 7.
In order for a limit to exist, the function must
approach the same value From the left and from
the right.
21Infinite Limits
What happens to the function value as x gets
closer and closer to 3 from the right?
x 3.5 3.1 3.01 3.001 3.0001 3.00001 3.000001
y 3 11 101 1001 10001 100001 1000001
The function increases without bound so we say
There is a vertical asymptote at x 3.
22The line xa is a Vertical Asymptote if at least
one is true.
Identify any vertical asymptotes
23Graph of f(x)
True or false
- x 2 is in the domain of f
242.3 Functions That Agree at All But One Point
If f(x) g(x) for all x in an open interval
except x c then
Example
then
Evaluate by direct substitution 2-5 -3
As x gets closer and closer and closer to 2, the
function value gets closer and closer to -3.
25Analytic
Using direct substitution,
As x gets closer and closer to 2 (but not equal
to 2) f(x) gets closer and closer to 12
26Compute some limits
27Basic Limits
If b and c are real numbers and is n a positive
integer
Guess an answer and click to check.
Guess an answer and click to check.
Guess an answer and click to check.
-2
Ex
5
Ex
9
Ex
28Properties of Limits
Multiplication by a constant b
Limit of a sum or difference
Limit of a product
Limit of a power
Limit of a quotient when denominator is not 0.
29Using Properties of Limits
Properties allow evaluation of limits by direct
substitution for many functions.
Ex.
As x gets closer and closer to 3, the function
value gets closer and closer to 9.
30Analytic Techniques
- Direct substitution
- First substitute the value of x being approached
into the function f(x). If this is a real number
then the limit is that number.
- If the function is piecewise defined, you must
perform the substitution from both sides of x.
The limit exists if both sides yield the same
value. If different values are produced, we say
the limit does not exist.
31Analytic Techniques
- Rewrite algebraically if direct substitution
produces an indeterminate form such as 0/0 - Factor and reduce
- Rationalize a numerator or denominator
- Simplify a complex fraction
When you rewrite you are often producing another
function that agrees with the original in all
but one point. When this happens the limits at
that point are equal.
32Find the indicated limit
direct substitution fails
Rewrite and cancel
- 5
now use direct sub.
33Find the indicated limit
direct substitution fails
Rewrite and cancel
now use direct sub.
34Find the indicated limit
5
calculate one sided limits
7
Since the one-sided limits are not equal, we say
the limit does not exist. There will be a jump in
the graph at x 2
35Determine the limit on y sin ?/? as ?
approaches 0.
Figure 1.24 The graph of f (?) (sin ?)/?.
36A one-sided limit
Figure 1.37 The graph of y e1/x for x lt 0
shows limx?0 e1/x 0. (Example 11)
37Limits that are infinite (y increases without
bound)
An infinite limit will exist as x approaches a
finite value when direct substitution produces
If an infinite limit occurs at x c we have a
vertical asymptote with the equation x c.
382.5 Continuity in (a) at x 0 but not in other
graphs.
Figure 1.50 The function in (a) is continuous
at x 0 the functions in (b) through ( f ) are
not.
39Conditions for continuity
A function y f(x) is continuous at x c if and
only if
- The function is defined at x c
- The limit as x approaches c exists
- The value of the function and the value of
the limit are equal.
40Find the reasons for discontinuity in b, c, d, e
and f.
41Composite Functions
Figure 1.53 Composites of continuous functions
are continuous.
If two functions are continuous at x c then
their composition will be continuous.
is continuous for all reals.
Example
42Exploring Continuity
Are there values of c and m that make the
function continuous At x 1? Find c and m or
tell why they do not exist.
43Exploring Continuity
442.6 Slope of secant line and slope of tangent line
45s(t) 8(t3 6 t2 12t)
Position of a car at t hours.
1. Draw a graph.
2. Does the car ever stop?
3. What is the average velocity for the following
intervals a. 0, 2, b. .5, 1.5 c. .9,1.1
4. Estimate the instantaneous velocity at t 1
46s(t) 8(t3 6 t2 12t)
2. Appears to stop at t 2. (Velocity 0)
3. What is the average velocity for 0, 2, .5,
1.5 .9,1.1
t s(t)
0 0
2 62
.5 37
1.5 63
.9 53.352
1.1 58.168
a) 31 mph b) 26 mph c) 24.08 mph
47Find an equation of the tangent line to y 2x3
4 at the point P(2, 12)
So, m 24. Use the point slope form to write the
equation
48Slope of the tangent line at x a
Figure 1.62 The tangent slope is
f (x0 h) f (x0) h
lim
h?0
Q(a h, f (a h))
f(ah) f(a)
P(a, f(a))
a h
a
49Other form for Slope of secant line of tangent
line
Let h x - a
Then x a h
50Find an equation of the tangent line at (3, ½) to
At a 3, m - 1/8
Using the point-slope formula