I don't know how this problem is solved.

nombreuso

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What value for the constant c will make the function e^(-x) + 1 + cx approximately constant, for values of x near 0?
Find the function y(x) satisfying = xy + x, y(0) = 1
These are two problems, can you solve one of them as an example?
 
What value for the constant c will make the function e^(-x) + 1 + cx approximately constant, for values of x near 0?
Find the function y(x) satisfying = xy + x, y(0) = 1
These are two problems, can you solve one of them as an example?
1. What can we say about the derivative of this function at 0?
2. =xy+x?
 
For 1. do you know the expansion of [MATH]e^x[/MATH]?
[MATH]e^x=1+x+\frac{x^2}{2!}+\frac{x^3}{3!}+...[/MATH]so [MATH]e^{-x}=1-x+\frac{x^2}{2!}-\frac{x^3}{3!}+...[/MATH]
[MATH]\therefore [/MATH] near [MATH]x=0[/MATH], [MATH]e^{-x} \approx 1-x[/MATH]so what value of c would make [MATH]1-x+1+cx[/MATH] approx constant?

For 2. you need to restate this because it is not clear what it means.

lev888's method for question 1 is nicer than mine.
 
Sorry, I pasted another exercise by accident, so I'll focus on the first exercise only. It's supossed to be a problem about approximation, so i wrote e^(-x) + sqrt(1 + cx) is approximately (1+x)(1+cx/2) = 1 + (c/2 +1)x + (cx^2)/2
 
Sorry, I pasted another exercise by accident, so I'll focus on the first exercise only. It's supossed to be a problem about approximation, so i wrote e^(-x) + sqrt(1 + cx) is approximately (1+x)(1+cx/2) = 1 + (c/2 +1)x + (cx^2)/2
This makes your question more obscure rather than less.

The initial question seemed to be

[MATH]\text {What is } c \text { if } f(x) = e^{-x} + 1 + cx \text { and } f(x) \approx k \text { when } x \approx 0.[/MATH]
The question seems almost trivial because, as lev so strongly hinted,

[MATH]\left (\dfrac{d}{dx} k \right ) = 0 \text { and } f’(x) = - \dfrac{1}{e^x} + c \approx c - 1 = 0 \text { when } x \approx 0.[/MATH]
For what value of c does c - 1 = 0?

Lex reaches the same point by a perhaps more rigorous but less intuitive (to me at least) route.

Based on your second post, I am now not even sure what the actual question is. If the wrong exercise was posted, which is the first exercise in the picture you did not show us in either post.
 
Last edited:
What value for the constant c will make the function e^(-x) + 1 + cx approximately constant, for values of x near 0?
This makes your question more obscure rather than less.

The initial question seemed to be

[MATH]\text {What is } c \text { if } f(x) = e^{-x} + 1 + cx \text { and } f(x) \approx k \text { when } x \approx 0.[/MATH]
The question seems almost trivial because, as lev so strongly hinted,

[MATH]\left (\dfrac{d}{dx} k \right ) = 0 \text { and } f’(x) = - \dfrac{1}{e^x} + c \approx c - 1 = 0 \text { when } x \approx 0.[/MATH]
For what value of c does c - 1 = 0?

Lex reaches the same point by a perhaps more rigorous but less intuitive (to me at least) route.

Based on your second post, I am now not even sure what the actual question is. If the wrong exercise was posted, which is the first exercise in the picture you did not show us in either post.
What value for the constant c will make the function e^(-x) + sqrt(1 + cx) approximately constant, for values of x near 0? I made a mistake when pasting the question and don't know how to edit it. Now I'm also confused.
 
What value for the constant c will make the function e^(-x) + 1 + cx approximately constant, for values of x near 0?

What value for the constant c will make the function e^(-x) + sqrt(1 + cx) approximately constant, for values of x near 0? I made a mistake when pasting the question and don't know how to edit it. Now I'm also confused.
Lev’s hint still applies.

If y is a constant, then dy/dx = 0, right?

Locally a differentiable function is approximately a straight line with a slope equal to the derivative. You understand that, right?

So, if the function is almost constant, it looks locally like a horizontal line. And the slope of that line is about zero.

[MATH]f’(x) = - \dfrac{1}{e^x} + \dfrac{c}{2\sqrt{1 + cx}} \approx \dfrac{c}{2} - 1 \text { when } x \approx 0.[/MATH]
Can you solve (c / 2) - 1 = 0?

Make sense?
 
For 1. do you know the expansion of [MATH]e^x[/MATH]?
[MATH]e^x=1+x+\frac{x^2}{2!}+\frac{x^3}{3!}+...[/MATH]so [MATH]e^{-x}=1-x+\frac{x^2}{2!}-\frac{x^3}{3!}+...[/MATH]
[MATH]\therefore [/MATH] near [MATH]x=0[/MATH], [MATH]e^{-x} \approx 1-x[/MATH]
[MATH]\sqrt{1+cx}=(1+cx)^\frac{1}{2}\approx 1+\frac{1}{2} cx \hspace2ex \text{ near }x=0[/MATH]so [MATH]e^{-x}+\sqrt{1+cx} \:\approx \: 1-x \hspace2ex + \hspace2ex 1+\frac{1}{2}cx[/MATH]What value of [MATH]c[/MATH] would make [MATH]\hspace2ex 2+\left(\frac{1}{2}c-1\right)x \hspace2ex [/MATH] constant?
 
For 1. do you know the expansion of [MATH]e^x[/MATH]?
[MATH]e^x=1+x+\frac{x^2}{2!}+\frac{x^3}{3!}+...[/MATH]so [MATH]e^{-x}=1-x+\frac{x^2}{2!}-\frac{x^3}{3!}+...[/MATH]
[MATH]\therefore [/MATH] near [MATH]x=0[/MATH], [MATH]e^{-x} \approx 1-x[/MATH]
[MATH]\sqrt{1+cx}=(1+cx)^\frac{1}{2}\approx 1+\frac{1}{2} cx \hspace2ex \text{ near }x=0[/MATH]so [MATH]e^{-x}+\sqrt{1+cx} \:\approx \: 1-x \hspace2ex + \hspace2ex 1+\frac{1}{2}cx[/MATH]What value of [MATH]c[/MATH] would make [MATH]\hspace2ex 2+\left(\frac{1}{2}c-1\right)x \hspace2ex [/MATH] constant?
c=2. Thanks, I think I understood.
 
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