Friday, July 3, 2020
How to Find the Slope of a Line Tangent to a Curve
Many common questions asked on the AP Calculus Exams involve finding the equation of a line tangent to a curve at a point. à If we are adept at quickly taking derivatives of functions, then 90 percent of the work for these types of problems is done. à Everything else comes down to quick algebra. The first thing we need to do is to go back to what we learned in our algebra: the equation of a line or y = mx+b, where m is our slope and b is our y-intercept. à This should be at our fingertips. à Now, we donââ¬â¢t always have our y-intercept, so a slightly different form of our equation of a line is often useful: y-y1 = m(x-x1), where m is our slope, and x1 and y1 are the coordinates of a point. à Questions involving finding the equation of a line tangent to a point then come down to two parts: finding the slope, and finding a point on the line. Let us take an example Find the equations of a line tangent to y = x3-2x2+x-3 at the point x=1. à Firstly, what is the slope of this line going to be? à Anytime we are asked about slope, immediately find the derivative of the function. à We should get yââ¬â¢ = 3x2 ââ¬â 4x + 1. à Evaluate this derivative at x = 1, and we get 3(1)2 -4(1) +1 = 3-4+1= 0. à The slope, m, of this function at x=1 is 0. à m=0. à (Note, for the AP exam, you should also be able to use the derivative of this function in a similar way to find local minimums and maximums ââ¬â we should be able to see that because our slope is 0, we are looking at a line that exists at a local minimum or maximum).à Second, let us find a set of points (x1, y1) that exist on the line. à At this point, we can only use one value of x, and that is the value given, x=1. à To find the value y, we plug it into our original equation: y = (1)3-2(1)2+1-3 = 1-2+1-3 = -3. à Therefore (x1, y1) = (1, -3). à We now have both a point on our line and the slope of our line.à This is everything we need to find our equation. The equation of our line: y-y1 = m(x-x1) y-(-3) = 0(x-1) y +3 = 0 y = -3 Here we have the equation with the tangent line drawn in: (Can you find a local maximum of this function?) Another tangent line equation example Letââ¬â¢s do the exact same question as above, but at a new point:à Find the equations of a line tangent to y = x3-2x2+x-3 at the point x=2. à Again, what is the slope of this line going to be? à First, the derivative: yââ¬â¢ = 3x2 ââ¬â 4x + 1. à Evaluate at x = 2. 3(2)2-4(2) +1 = 12-8+1 = 5. à The slope, m, of this function at x=2 is 5à (m=5). à Set of points (x1, y1). à We can only use x=2. à Plug it into our original equation. y = à 23-2(2)2+2-3 = 8-8+2-3 = -1. (x1, y1) = (2, -1). The equation of our line: y-y1 = m(x-x1) y-(-1) = 5(x-2) y +1 = 5x-10 y = 5x-11 Finding the Slope of a Tangent Line: A Review Finding the equation of a line tangent to a curve at a point always comes down to the following three steps: Find the derivative and use it to determine our slope m at the point given Determine the yà value of the function at the x value we are given. Plug what weââ¬â¢ve found into the equation of a line. Master these steps, and we will be able to find the tangent line to any curve at any point.
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