Assignment 21 Query

course Mth 173

C钝׫d~rVwnާvi|Iassignment #021

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Calculus I

07-26-2007

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11:33:21

**** Query Problem 4.8.1 (3d edition 3.8.4). x graph v shape from (0,2) |slope|=1, y graph sawtooth period 2, |y|<=2, approx sine.

Describe the motion of the particle described by the two graphs.

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RESPONSE -->

The particle charts a diamond pattern. This pattern starts at (1, 0), going to (0, 1), down to (-1, 0), then to (0, -1), and ending up at (1, 0).

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11:36:05

** The question was about the motion of the particle.

The graphs are of position vs. time, i.e., x vs. t for a particle moving on the x axis. The slope of a position vs. time graph of a particle is the velocity of the particle.

The first graph has slope -1 for negative values of t. So up to t = 0 the particle is moving to the left at velocity 1. Then when the particle reaches x = 2 the slope becomes +1, indicating that the velocity of the particle instantaneously changes from -1 to +1 at t = 0 and the particle moves back off to the right.

On the second graph the velocity of the particle changes abruptly--instantaneously, in fact--when the graph reaches a sharp point, which it does twice between t = 0 and t = 2. At these points velocity goes from positive to negative or from negative to positive.

Velocity is a maximum when the slope takes its greatest positive value as the graph passes upward through the x axis where the slope is probably 4 (I don't have the graph in front of me so that might be off, but if x goes from -2 to 2 as t changes by 1 the slope will be 4), and is a minimum when the slope takes its lowest negative value as the graph passes through the x axis going downward (slope -4?). So every 2 time units the particle will go from maximum positive velocity 4 to lowest negative velocity -4, as the ball goes from position x = -2 to x = +2 and back. **

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RESPONSE -->

Hmm. I answered a different problem (4.8.1 in 4th edition), but I am not sure if I have completed this one.

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11:39:43

Query problem 4.8.21 (3d edition 3.8.16). Ellipse centered (0,0) thru (+-5, 0) and (0, +-7).Give your parameterization of the curve.

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RESPONSE -->

Not assigned. My answer for 4.8.21 (4th edition):

x = 5 cos t

y = 7 sin t

0 <= t <= 2'pi

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11:40:31

The standard parameterization of a unit circle (i.e., a circle of radius 1) is x = cos(t), y = sin(t), 0 <= t < 2 pi.

An ellipse is essentially a circle elongated in two directions. To elongate the circle in such a way that its major and minor axes are the x and y axes we can simply multiply the x and y coordinates by the appropriate factors. An ellipse through the given points can therefore be parameterized as

x = 5 cos (t), y = 7 sin (t), 0 <= t < 2 pi.

To confirm the parameterization, at t = 0, pi/2, pi, 3 pi/2 and 2 pi we have the respective points (x, y):

(5 cos(0), 7 sin(0) ) = (5, 0)

(5 cos(pi/2), 7 sin(pi/2) ) = (0, 7)

(5 cos(pi), 7 sin(pi) ) = (-5, 0)

(5 cos(3 pi/2), 7 sin(3 pi/2) ) = (0, -7)

(5 cos(pi), 7 sin(pi) ) = (5, 0). **

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RESPONSE -->

Ok. Good way to check.

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12:13:28

Query 4.8.23 (was 3.8.18). x = t^3 - t, y = t^2, t = 2.What is the equation of the tangent line at t = 2 and how did you obtain it?

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RESPONSE -->

I found the tangent line to be:

y = (4/11) (x - 6) + 4

First I found the point by plugging in t=2 to both equation. The point here is (6, 4).

I took the differential of each equation:

x' = 3t^2 - 1

y' = 2t

I then solved for the parametric equations of the tangent line:

x = 6 + 11(t - 2)

y = 4 + 4(t - 2)

I then rearranged to isolate (t - 2) in each equation:

(x - 6) / 11 = t - 2

(y - 4) / 4 = t - 2

These can then be set equal to one another:

(x - 6) / 11 = (y - 4) / 4

Rearranging to solve for y:

y = (4/11) (x - 6) + 4

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12:13:47

** Derivatives are dx/dt = 3t^2 - 1, which at t = 2 is dx/dt = 11, and

dy/dt = 2t, which at t=2 is 4.

We have x = 6 + 11 t, which solved for t gives us t = (x - 6) / 11, and y = 4 + 4 t.

Substituting t = (x-6)/11 into y = 4 + 4 t we get

y = 4 + 4(x-6)/11 = 4/ll x + 20/11.

Note that at t = 2 you get x = 6 so y = 4/11 * 6 + 20/11 = 44/11 = 4.

Alternatively:

The slope at t = 2 is dy/dx = dy/dt / (dx/dt) = 4 / 11.

The equation of the line thru (6, 4) with slope 4/11 is

y - 4 = 4/11 ( x - 6), which simplifies to

y = 4/11 x + 20/11. **

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RESPONSE -->

Ok.

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21:56:26

Query 4.8.12 (3d edition 3.8.22). x = cos(t^2), y = sin(t^2).What is the speed of the particle?

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RESPONSE -->

Not in homework.

My speed result:

v = 2t 'sqrt( sin^2 t^2 + cos^2 t^2 )

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21:56:51

The velocities in the x and y directions are dx / dt and dy / dt.

Since x = cos(t^2) we have

dx/dt = -2(t) sin (t)^2.

Since y = sin(t^2) we have dy/dt = 2(t) cos (t)^2.

Speed is the magnitude of the resultant velocity speed = | v | = sqrt(vx^2 + vy^2) so we have

speed = {[-2(t) sin (t)^2]^2 + [2(t) cos (t)^2]^2}^1/2.

This simplifies to

{-4t^2 sin^2(t^2) + 4 t^2 cos^2(t^2) } ^(1/2) or

(4t^2)^(1/2) { -sin^2(t^2) + cos^2(t^2) }^(1/2) or

2 | t | { -sin^2(t^2) + cos^2(t^2) }^(1/2). **

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RESPONSE -->

Ok

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21:58:29

Does the particle ever come to a stop? If so when? If not why not?

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RESPONSE -->

The particle would come to a stop at any time when both x and y are equal to zero. The particle will then stop at:

t=0

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22:01:17

07-26-2007 22:01:17

** The particle isn't moving when v = 0.

v = 2 | t | { -sin^2(t^2) + cos^2(t^2) }^(1/2) is zero when

t = 0 or when

-sin^2(t^2) + cos^2(t^2) = 0.

t = 0 gives x = cos(0) = 1 and y = sin(0) = 0, so it isn't moving at (1, 0).

More generally:

-sin^2(t^2) + cos^2(t^2) = 0 when sin(t^2) = cos(t^2).

Since sin(z) = cos(z) when z = `pi/4 or when x = 5 `pi / 4, and in general when z = (4n + 1) `pi / 4, n = 0, 1, 2, 3, ...

sin^2(t^2) = cos^2(t^2) when t^2 = `pi/4 or 5 `pi / 4 or (4n+1)`pi/4, i.e., when

t = +- `sqrt( `pi/4), +- `sqrt(5 `pi / 4), or +-`sqrt(4n+1)`pi/4 for n = 0, 1, 2, 3, ... . **

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NOTES -------> Okay. I missed the general form.

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22:05:21

Query problem 3.9.18 (3d edition 3.9.8) (was 4.8.20) square the local linearization of e^x at x=0 to obtain the approximate local linearization of e^(2x)

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RESPONSE -->

The local linear approximation I got was:

e^(2x) - 2x e^x - 2e^x - x^2 - 2x + 1

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22:14:50

07-26-2007 22:14:50

** The local linearization is the tangent line.

The line tangent to y = e^x at x = 0 is the line with slope y ' = e^x evaluated at x = 0, or slope 1. The line passes through (0, e^0) = (0, 1).

The local linearization, or the tangent line, is therefore (y-1) = 1 ( x - 0) or y = x + 1.

The line tangent to y = e^(2x) is y = 2x + 1.

Thus near x = 0, since (e^x)^2 = e^(2x), we might expect to have (x + 1)^2 = 2x + 1.

This is not exactly so, because (x + 1)^2 = x^2 + 2x + 1, not just 2x+1.

However, near x = 0 we see that x^2 becomes insignificant compared to x (e.g., .001^ 2 = .000001), so for sufficiently small x we see that x^2 + 2x + 1 is as close as we wish to 2x + 1. **

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NOTES -------> Hmm. I need to restudy this one.

basic synopsis:

e^x is close to x + 1 when x is close to 0.

e^(2x) is the square of e^x so must be close to (x + 1)^2 = x^2 + 2 x + 1 when x is close to 0.

When x is close to 0, x^2 doesn't amount to a hill of beans compared to 2x or 1, and no matter how small the hill, if you keep x close enough to 0 it's still so.

So when x is close to 0, e^(2x) is close to 1 + 2 x.

Of course you get the same thing by evaluating the derivative of e^(2x) at x = 0 and finding the equation of the tangent line.

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22:37:43

What do you get when you multiply the local linearization of e^x by itself, and in what sense is it consistent with the local linearization of e^(2x)? Which of the two expressions for e^(2x) is more accurate and why?

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RESPONSE -->

My aproximations were off, but the local linearization of e^(2x) would be more accurate for e^(2x). This is because it is taken from the direct point that we want the tangent line to, not a multiplication of the tangent line from another point.

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22:37:50

** The local linearization of e^(2x) is y = 2x + 1.

The square of the local linearization 1 + x of e^x is y = (x + 1)^2 = x^2 + 2x + 1 .

The two functions differ by the x^2 term. Near x = 0 the two graphs are very close, since if x is near 0 the value of x^2 will be very small. As we move away from x = 0 the x^2 term becomes more significant, giving the graph of the latter a slightly upward concavity, which for awhile nicely matches the upward concavity of y = e^(2x). The linear function cannot do this, so the square of the local linearization of e^x more closely fits the e^(2x) curve than does the local linearization of e^(2x). **

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RESPONSE -->

Ok.

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22:39:15

Query problem 3.9.22 (3d edition 3.9.12) T = 2 `pi `sqrt(L / g). How did you show that `dT = T / (2 L) * `dL?

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RESPONSE -->

I have no idea.

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22:50:33

** `sqrt(L/g) can be written as `sqrt(L) / `sqrt(g). It's a good idea to make this separation because L is variable, g is not.

So dT / dL = 2 `pi / `sqrt(g) * [ d(`sqrt(L) ) / dL ].

[ d(`sqrt(L) ) / dL ] is the derivative of `sqrt(L), or L^(1/2), with respect to L. So

[ d(`sqrt(L) ) / dL ] = 1 / 2 L^(-1/2) = 1 / (2 `sqrt(L)).

Thus dT / dL = 2 `pi / [ `sqrt(g) * 2 `sqrt(L) ] = `pi / [ `sqrt(g) `sqrt(L) ] .

This is the same as T / (2 L), since T / (2 L) = 2 `pi `sqrt(L / g) / (2 L) = `pi / (`sqrt(g) `sqrt(L) ).

Now since dT / dL = T / (2 L) we see that the differential is

`dT = dT/dL * `dL or

`dT = T / (2 L) * `dL. **

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RESPONSE -->

Ok.

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22:57:48

If we wish to estimate length to within 2%, within what % must we know L?

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RESPONSE -->

If the change in L is 2%, then :

dT = T / (2L) * 0.02

dT = T / l * .01

dT = .01 T

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23:03:31

** If `dL = .02 L then `dT = T / (2 L) * .02 L = .02 T / 2 = .01 T.

This tells us that to estimate T to within 1% we need to know L to within 2%. **

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RESPONSE -->

Ok.

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23:11:31

Query problem 4.7.4 (3d edition 4.8.9) graphs similar to -x^3 and x^3 at a.

What is the sign of lim{a->a} [ f(x)/ g(x) ]?

How do you know that the limit exists and how do you know that the limit has the sign you say it does?

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RESPONSE -->

I believe the sign is negative. This is because the graph of f(x) goes continually downward, creating a negative slope. The graph of g(x) goes upward, creating a positive slope. The third derivative of each function is not equal to 0, meaning that there is a slope to each function of some type.

Now the limit of f(x) / g(x) can be taken and l'Hopital's rule applies, creating a negative sign on the limit.

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23:11:40

** If one graph is the negative of the other, as appears to be the case, then for any x we would have f(x) / g(x) = -1. So the limit would have to be -1.

It doesn't matter that at x = 0 we have 0 / 0, because what happens AT the limiting point doesn't matter, only what happens NEAR the limiting point, where 'nearness' is unlimited by always finite (i.e., never 0). **

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RESPONSE -->

Ok.

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23:21:42

Query 4.7.8 (3d edition 3.10.8) lim{x -> 0} [ x / (sin x)^(1/3) ].What is the given limit and how did you obtain it?

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RESPONSE -->

I find the limit to be 0.

I found this by taking the derivative of the top and the bottom of the fraction, leaving the fraction:

1 / ( cos x * 1/3 (sin x)^(-2/3) )

Which is equal to:

3 / ( cos x (sin x)^(-2/3) )

However, when evaluating this for a = 0, this immediately becomes 0 as sin a becomes 0.

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23:25:22

As x -> 0 both numerator f(x) = x and the denominator g(x) = sin(x)^(1/3) both approach 0 as a limit. So we use l'Hopital's Rule

f ' (x) = 1 and g ' (x) = 1/3 sin(x)^(-2/3), so f ' (x) / g ' (x) = 1 / (1/3 sin(x)^(-2/3) ) = 3 sin(x)^(2/3).

Since as x -> 0 we have sin(x) -> 0 the limiting value of f ' (x) / g ' (x) is 0.

It follows from l'Hopital's Rule that the limiting value of f(x) / g(x) is also zero.

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RESPONSE -->

Hmm. I thought the derivative of g(x) is:

1/3 cos x (sin x)^(-2/3)

because of the chain rule.

You're right. Fortunately it doesn't make a difference in the final result, since cos(0) is 1, but that was careless editing on my part.

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23:27:56

What are the local linearizations of x and sin(x)^(1/3) and how do they allow you to answer the preceding question?

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RESPONSE -->

The local linearization of x is simply y=x.

The local linearization of sin(x)^(1/3) is 0.

Since anything divided by 0 is 0, there we go.

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23:28:09

** The local linearization of the numerator is just y = x.

The denominator doesn't have a local linearization at 0; rather it approaches infinite slope.

This means that as x -> 0 the ratio of the denominator function to the numerator function increases without bound, making the values of numerator / denominator approach zero. **

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RESPONSE -->

Ok.

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23:28:37

Query Add comments on any surprises or insights you experienced as a result of this assignment.

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RESPONSE -->

Hmm. I need to consider more the usage of the dy/dx methods and how to work with those.

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23:29:13

I am confused on l'Hopital`s rule:

How do you know when it can or cannot be used to evaluate a fn?

I understand that f(a)=g(a)=0 and g'(x) cannot equal zero, but what are the other limitations?

** Those are the only limitations. Check that these conditions hold, then you are free to look at the limiting ratio f '(a) / g ' (a) of the derivatives.

For example, on #18 the conditions hold for (a) (both limits are zero) but not for (b) (numerator isn't 0) and not for (c) (denominator doesn't have a limit). **

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RESPONSE -->

Ok.

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Your work looks good. See my notes. Let me know if you have any questions. &#