Table of contents
- 0. Functions7h 52m
- Introduction to Functions16m
- Piecewise Functions10m
- Properties of Functions9m
- Common Functions1h 8m
- Transformations5m
- Combining Functions27m
- Exponent rules32m
- Exponential Functions28m
- Logarithmic Functions24m
- Properties of Logarithms34m
- Exponential & Logarithmic Equations35m
- Introduction to Trigonometric Functions38m
- Graphs of Trigonometric Functions44m
- Trigonometric Identities47m
- Inverse Trigonometric Functions48m
- 1. Limits and Continuity2h 2m
- 2. Intro to Derivatives1h 33m
- 3. Techniques of Differentiation3h 18m
- 4. Applications of Derivatives2h 38m
- 5. Graphical Applications of Derivatives6h 2m
- 6. Derivatives of Inverse, Exponential, & Logarithmic Functions2h 37m
- 7. Antiderivatives & Indefinite Integrals1h 26m
3. Techniques of Differentiation
Basic Rules of Differentiation
Problem 67a
Textbook Question
Let f(x) = 4√x - x.
Find all points on the graph of f at which the tangent line is horizontal.
![](/channels/images/assetPage/verifiedSolution.png)
1
Step 1: Understand that a horizontal tangent line occurs where the derivative of the function is zero. Therefore, we need to find the derivative of the function f(x) = 4√x - x.
Step 2: Differentiate f(x) with respect to x. The derivative of 4√x is 4 * (1/2)x^(-1/2) = 2x^(-1/2), and the derivative of -x is -1. So, f'(x) = 2x^(-1/2) - 1.
Step 3: Set the derivative equal to zero to find the x-values where the tangent line is horizontal: 2x^(-1/2) - 1 = 0.
Step 4: Solve the equation 2x^(-1/2) - 1 = 0 for x. This involves isolating x by first adding 1 to both sides, then multiplying both sides by x^(1/2), and finally squaring both sides to solve for x.
Step 5: Once you have the x-value(s), substitute back into the original function f(x) to find the corresponding y-value(s). These (x, y) pairs are the points on the graph where the tangent line is horizontal.
Recommended similar problem, with video answer:
![](/channels/images/assetPage/verifiedSolution.png)
This video solution was recommended by our tutors as helpful for the problem above
Video duration:
4mPlay a video:
Was this helpful?
Watch next
Master Derivatives of Linear Functions with a bite sized video explanation from Callie
Start learningRelated Videos
Related Practice