SOLUTION: help needed! problem 16 on page 298. f(x)= ax^3 + bx^2 + cx + d (a different from 0) Find conditions on a, b, and c to ensure that f is always increasing or always decreasi

Algebra ->  Quadratic Equations and Parabolas -> SOLUTION: help needed! problem 16 on page 298. f(x)= ax^3 + bx^2 + cx + d (a different from 0) Find conditions on a, b, and c to ensure that f is always increasing or always decreasi      Log On


   



Question 80864This question is from textbook CALCULUS
: help needed!
problem 16 on page 298.
f(x)= ax^3 + bx^2 + cx + d (a different from 0)
Find conditions on a, b, and c to ensure that f is always increasing or always decreasing on (negative infinitif, positive infinitif).
1 solution
Please do not contact:allmaiga@hotmail.com because I gave that email by mistake.
tanks.
This question is from textbook CALCULUS

Answer by Edwin McCravy(20054) About Me  (Show Source):
You can put this solution on YOUR website!
f(x)= ax^3 + bx^2 + cx + d (a different from 0)
Find conditions on a, b, and c to ensure that f is always increasing or always decreasing on (negative infinitif, positive infinitif).
1 solution

The condition that f is always increasing or decreasing 
on (-oo,oo) is that f'(x) is either always positive, or
always negative.

So we find the derivative f'(x)

f(x)= ax³ + bx² + cx + d

f'(x) = 3ax² + 2bx + c

Then set that > 0

3ax² + 2bx + c > 0

For this to be true, 

f'(x) = 3ax² + 2bx + c 

must represent a parabola
which is always either above the x-axis
or always below the x-axis.  This means
that f'(x) can have no real zeros.

Therefore its discriminant must be
negative.  The discriminant of

Ax² + Bx + C is B²-4AC, and in our case

A = 3a, B=2b, C = c, so the discriminant is

(2b)² - 4(3a)(c) or 4b² - 12ac, so we must have

4b² - 12ac < 0 or

       4b² < 12ac or

        b² < 3ac

is the requirement.

Now for a word of caution.  There is some disagreement
among mathematicians as to whether to say that a 
function is increasing or decreasing at a horizontal 
inflection point.  If your teacher is one who 
says that the function f(x) = x³ + 3x² + 3x, graphed
below

graph%28300%2C300%2C+-2%2C2%2C-2%2C2%2C+x%5E3%2B3x%5E2%2B3x%29

is increasing everywhere, even at the point (-1,-1), 
where it has a horizontal inflection point, i.e. its 
derivative is 0, indicated below by the horizontal 
tangent line:

graph%28300%2C300%2C+-2%2C2%2C-2%2C2%2C+x%5E3%2B3x%5E2%2B3x%2C-1%29    

then you must replace all the strict inequalities
" < " by " <, and then the requirement will
be 

        b² < 3ac

and also you would have to change the initial
statement above to

The condition that f is always increasing or decreasing 
on (-oo,oo) is that f'(x) is either always nonpositive,
or always nonnegative.


So be sure to ask your teacher whether or not he or she
considers a function to be increasing (or decreasing)
at a horizontal inflection point, where the derivative
is 0, as long as it is increasing (or decreasing)
everywhere else.

Edwin