I am going through past papers for my exam on Tuesday and I am getting stuck trying to figure out how my lecturer came to the solution of this question.
The question is:
Given is the function f(x) = 5 + xe-5x, with domain 0≤x≤1. Apply the extreme value theorem to the above function.
My lecturer has given the answer as: f'(x) = e-5x + xe-5 .-5 which he then simplifies to f'(x) = e-5x(1-5x)
How did he come to this solution? Specifcally, whey does he multiply by -5 and how is the simplification (final answer) equal to the initial?
I have looked at every different definition/equation and just cannot work this out
The question is:
Given is the function f(x) = 5 + xe-5x, with domain 0≤x≤1. Apply the extreme value theorem to the above function.
My lecturer has given the answer as: f'(x) = e-5x + xe-5 .-5 which he then simplifies to f'(x) = e-5x(1-5x)
How did he come to this solution? Specifcally, whey does he multiply by -5 and how is the simplification (final answer) equal to the initial?
I have looked at every different definition/equation and just cannot work this out