Calculus1 Chapter6 Lesson4
Calculus1 Chapter6 Lesson4
Calculus1 Chapter6 Lesson4
CALCULUS 1
CHAPTER 6
APPLICATION OF
DERIVATIVES: SKETCHING
GRAPHS OF FUNCTIONS
LESSON 4
CONCAVITY, POINTS OF
INFLECTION, AND THE
SECOND DERIVATIVE TEST
The direction in which a graph of function curves or bends is one of its
most distinctive features. A graph of a function may curve upward or
downward as the point that traces it moves from left to right.
DEFINITION:
The curve is said to be concave
upward if the slope of the function is
increasing as the point that traces the
curves moves from left to right.
Moreover, on the interval where the
function is concave upward, all the
tangents to the curve on that interval
are below the graph of the function. CONCAVE
UPWARD
DEFINITION:
CONCAVE
The curve is said to be concave DOWNWARD
downward if the slope of the function
is decreasing as the point that traces
the curves moves from left to right.
Moreover, on the interval where the
function is concave downward, all the
tangents to the curve on that interval
are above the graph of the function.
On some intervals, most curves concave upward and on other
intervals, they concave downward. This information about the
concavity of a curve is indicated by the sign of the second
derivative. This is shown in the following test for concavity.
Another point, if it exists, that is significant in sketching a curve and
has something to do with the changes in the direction of concavity is
called the point of inflection.
DEFINITION:
The point where the function is continuous and its concavity changes
from concave upward to concave downward or from concave
downward to concave upward is called a point of inflection.
To identify the intervals on which the graph is concave upward or
concave downward, the following guidelines may be utilized.
The information obtained from the guidelines may be organized in
the following table.
Interval −∞, 𝒂 𝒂, 𝒃 𝒃, +∞
Test Value c d e
Sign of 𝒇′′ 𝒙 + or – + or – + or –
𝑰𝟏 = (−∞, 𝟐] 𝑰𝟐 = [𝟐, ∞)
Let 𝒇′′ 𝒙 = 𝟎.
Since there are no critical numbers when 𝒇′′ 𝒙 = 𝟎 using the second derivative.