Find the intervals in which the cubic function 4x^3-6x^2-72x+30 would be strictly increasing and strictly decreasing.
Patience Owens
Open question
2022-08-22
How do you check which intervals a cubic function will increase and in which intervals it will decrease? I was trying to find the intervals in which the cubic function would be strictly increasing and strictly decreasing. I managed to get the fact that at the values {-2,3} the differential of the function is zero. However this divides the function in three intervals, how can i know which intervals the function increases in and which intervals the function decreases in? Note: I know you could simply plot the function. I was hoping for a more analytical method.
Answer & Explanation
Leon Clark
Beginner2022-08-23Added 9 answers
Step 1 Let's look at this in a little more depth. We have the function with derivative . Step 2 We know the function is either going "up-down-up" or "down-up-down" (this you can say if you found two distict zeroes in the derivative- if not, then the cubic goes only "up" or only "down"), since you've found . We can look at the leading coefficient to check where the function goes up and down (if the leading coefficient is positive, then it is "up-down-up" and otherwise, it is "down-up-down". I might make this a little more intuitive if I say: in, for example, , the will always win of , so in the end, the function will increase). We can also compute the derivative in a specific point in one of the intervals , or , for example, in , to get to know that the function is decreasing on that interval, and so it must be "up-down-up".
Ronin Tran
Beginner2022-08-24Added 2 answers
Step 1 Whether a differentiable function is increasing or decreasing (or stationary) at a point is (essentially) determined by the sign of its derivative. For a cubic polynomial function , the derivative is . Step 2 Thus, the character of the roots of p′, that is, the critical points of p, is determined completely by the discriminant of p': - If , then p′ has two distinct roots, . If (in particular, if it is monic), then since , we conclude that p is increasing where and , decreasing where , and hence has a local maximum at and a local minimum at . - If , then p′ has a double root, r. If , we conclude that p is increasing where and that , so that p has an inflection point at r, and has no minimum or maximum. (In fact, p is strictly increasing everywhere, as implies .) - If , then p′ has no roots. If , p is increasing everywhere. (All of these statements are reversed appropriately when .) Example For our polynomial , computing gives , and we are in the first case.