Whats the opposite/inverse of the point of inflection of a curve. Qualitatively it can be called a "point of diminishing returns", or described as the point where the slope of the curve ceases to increase at a previously sustained rate. What is the mathematical representation of this point?thanks.
12/1/2005 10:28:48 AM
That sounds like you are describing an inflection point, that is the boundary between a curve that is concave up and one that is concave down.
12/1/2005 1:14:07 PM
but whether it is up or down its still called an "inflection point"?
12/1/2005 1:35:58 PM
yeait is just where the second derivative is equal to zero
12/1/2005 1:45:32 PM
ok thanks
12/1/2005 4:44:08 PM
This might be obvious, I don't know, but it's not quite enough to say that inflection points are where the second derivative is zero--The second derivative also needs to change signs across that point.For example, f(x)=x^4 has second derivative zero at x=0, but this is not an infection point since the function is concave up everywhere (the second derivative is never negative).
12/1/2005 5:29:10 PM
so the opposite would be where the 2nd deriv = infiniti?
12/1/2005 9:42:18 PM
A line Y=mx+b has y''=0 everywhere but is neither concave up or down anywhere. Or is it both... hmm...
12/1/2005 10:17:33 PM
for the 2nd derivative rule to work, it has to be a newly defined zero--as in, if the first derivative is also zero at that point, that point can't also be a point of inflection
12/2/2005 12:38:22 PM
^wrong.Cabbage had it right--end of thread.
12/2/2005 4:54:30 PM
if that was the end then how are you reading this?
12/2/2005 6:00:41 PM
^^no, it isn't wrong.Cabbage isn't wrong either.
12/4/2005 12:04:45 PM
^ and ^^^^ what about f(x)=x^3 ? Notice that f ' (x) = 3x^2f '' (x) = 6xClearly f ' (0) = 0 and (0,0) is a point of inflection since f '' (x) < 0 when x < 0 and f '' (x) > 0 when x > 0. So here is an example of an inflection point which is not a newly defined zero. Your statement needs some adjustment.
12/4/2005 12:32:58 PM
^^ . I hope you're not a math major, or anything science related.And as mathman pointed out, the counter example to your claim is trivial. I thought you would think about it after I said you were wrong.
12/4/2005 2:35:35 PM