Question about constants appearing in antiderivatives
Say we have two functions f(x) and g(x) where
et1wdwk4o
Answered question
2022-05-14
Question about constants appearing in antiderivatives Say we have two functions f(x) and g(x) where . This surely means that we can write . Now let's say we are graphing these two functions and we want to edit one of them, say f(x) in such a way that the graph of f(x) lies perfectly on the graph of g(x). This would be possible to do by adding C to f(x) however only if C is a rational constant; if it is an irrational constant then we would need to use infinitely many digits of C to accomplish our goal since if we are using a finite number of digits of C it would be possible to "zoom in" the graph and see that the two functions don't overlap. This is only the context from which the question I want to ask emerged. What makes this constant irrational? Is the rationality/irrationality of the constant somehow dependent on the nature of the derivative of f(x) and g(x)?
Answer & Explanation
empatteMattmkezo
Beginner2022-05-15Added 22 answers
Step 1 Let's think about the simplest possible case. Let's suppose that for all x but further, suppose that these are both equal to 0. Then both f and g are constant functions. So and for some A and B, and we see that for . Step 2 You can imagine that you discover f by integration, and I discover g the same way. One possibility is that you find , and that I find . In this case, is a rational. But another possibility is that you come up with and I come up with , in which case , which is irrational. There's nothing in the nature of the derivative - the constant function 0 - that says anything about what the values A and B can be (indeed, any real number is a possible value).