Sec4.1: MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM VALUES. absolute maximum global maximum local maximum relative maximum...
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Transcript of Sec4.1: MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM VALUES. absolute maximum global maximum local maximum relative maximum...
Sec4.1: MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM VALUES
Sec4.1: MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM VALUES
absolute maximum
global maximum
local maximumrelative maximum
How many local maximum ??
Sec4.1: MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM VALUES
absolute minimumglobal minimum
local minimumrelative minimum
How many local minimum ??
The number f(c) is called the maximum value of f on Df(c)
c d
The number f(d) is called the maximum value of f on D
f(d)
The maximum and minimum values of are called the extreme values of f.
c2 c1
Example1:
Example2:
Example3:
We have seen that some functions have extreme values, whereas others do not.
1 f(x) is continuous on
2 Closed interval [a, b]
attains an absolute maximum f(c) and minimum f(d) value
],[, badc
THE EXTREME VALUE THEOREM
1 f(x) is continuous on
2 Closed interval [a, b]
attains an absolute maximum f(c) and minimum f(d) value
],[, badc
THE EXTREME VALUE THEOREM
Max?? Min?? What cond??Max?? Min?? What cond??
11
Remark: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.
1 f(x) is continuous on
2 Closed interval [a, b]
attains an absolute maximum f(c) and minimum f(d) value
],[, badc
THE EXTREME VALUE THEOREM
Fermat’s Theorem is named after Pierre Fermat (1601–1665), a French lawyer who took up mathematics as a hobby. Despite his amateur status, Fermat was one of the two inventors of analytic geometry (Descartes was the other). His methods for finding tangents to curves and maximum and minimum values (before the inventionof limits and derivatives) made him a forerunner of Newton in the creation of differential calculus.
Sec 3.11 HYPERBOLIC FUNCTIONSThe following examples caution us against reading too much into Fermat’s Theorem. We can’t expect to locate extreme values simply by setting f’(x) = 0 and solving for x.
Exampe5: 3)( xxf Exampe6: xxf )(
WARNING Examples 5 and 6 show that we must be careful when using Fermat’s Theorem. Example 5 demonstrates that even when f’(c)=0 there need not be a maximum or minimum at . (In other words, the converse of Fermat’s Theorem is false in general.) Furthermore, there may be an extreme value even when f’(c)=0 does not exist (as in Example 6).
F092
F081
F083
F091
In terms of critical numbers, Fermat’s Theorem can be rephrased as follows (compare Definition 6 with Theorem 4):
F092
F091
F081
F081
F092
F081
F083
F083