Surge Functions and finding Y co-ordinates

kais

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Hey guys, was wondering if i could get some help on this calculus question

For the general surge function Ate^-bt verify by differentiation that

(a) the turning point occurs at t= 1/b

(b) the point of inflection occurs at t= 2/b

(c) find the Y co-ordinates of the turning point and point of inflections

So far i have the first derivative which is ate^-bt = ae^-bt - bate^-bt = ae^-bt(1-bt)
finding zeroes means that ae^-bt will never equal zero so no solution , but 1-bt=0 give t=1/b

then for second part ive found the second derivative which ive written ae^-bt(1-bt)= -abe^-bt - abe^-bt + ab^2te^-bt = abe^bt(2-bt)

setting that to zeroes you end up with 2-bt=0 t=2/b

Now im not sure how i plug this back into the equation to get the y coordinates? this is the part im stuck on. Any help would be appreciated
also im not sure how to plug that graph into wolfram alpha, if someone could send me a link that would be awesome. And last thing if anyone knows how to format the equations better on this forum that would be awesome!

Cheers in advance!
 
For the general surge function Ate^-bt...
As posted, this is not a function, since there is no "equals" nor a function name. Also, lacking grouping symbols, only the "-b" is in the exponent. However, I suspect that "t" is the variable. Also, in what follows, you use "a" rather than "A", so I suspect the function is actually as follows:

. . . . .\(\displaystyle f(t)\, =\, ate^{-bt}\)

Kindly please reply with corrections, if the above is wrong.

verify by differentiation that

(a) the turning point occurs at t= 1/b
I will take "turning point" to be as defined here.

(b) the point of inflection occurs at t= 2/b

(c) find the Y co-ordinates of the turning point and point of inflections

So far i have the first derivative which is ate^-bt = ae^-bt - bate^-bt = ae^-bt(1-bt)
finding zeroes means that ae^-bt will never equal zero so no solution , but 1-bt=0 give t=1/b
I think this means that you did the following:

. . . . .\(\displaystyle f(t)\, =\, ate^{-bt}\)

. . . . .\(\displaystyle f'(t)\, =\, (a)\left(e^{-bt}\right)\, +\, (at)\left(-be^{-bt}\right)\, =\, ae^{-bt}\, -\, abte^{-bt}\)

. . . . .\(\displaystyle ae^{-bt}\, -\, abte^{-bt}\, =\, 0\)

. . . . .\(\displaystyle ae^{-bt}\, =\, abte^{-bt}\)

. . . . .\(\displaystyle \mbox{We know that }\, e^{-bt}\, \mbox{ is never zero, so we can divide thru:}\)

. . . . .\(\displaystyle a\, =\, abt\)

. . . . .\(\displaystyle a\, -\, abt\, =\, 0\)

. . . . .\(\displaystyle a(1\, -\, bt)\, =\, 0\)

. . . . .\(\displaystyle \mbox{By definition, we have }\, a\, \neq\, 0,\, \mbox{ so:}\)

. . . . .\(\displaystyle 1\, -\, bt\, =\, 0\)

. . . . .\(\displaystyle \dfrac{1}{b}\, =\, t\)

then for second part ive found the second derivative which ive written ae^-bt(1-bt)= -abe^-bt - abe^-bt + ab^2te^-bt = abe^bt(2-bt)
setting that to zeroes you end up with 2-bt=0 t=2/b
I think your steps were as follows:

. . . . .\(\displaystyle f'(t)\, =\, ae^{-bt}\, -\, abte^{-bt}\)

. . . . .\(\displaystyle f''(t)\, =\, \left(-abe^{-bt}\right)\, -\, \left(abe^{-bt}\, -\, ab^2te^{-bt}\right)\, =\, ab^2te^{-bt}\, -\, 2abe^{-bt}\)

. . . . .\(\displaystyle ab^2te^{-bt}\, -\, 2abe^{-bt}\, =\, 0\)

. . . . .\(\displaystyle \mbox{We have }\, a\, \neq\, 0,\, b\, \neq\, 0,\, \mbox{ and }\, e^{-bt}\, \neq\, 0,\, \mbox{ so:}\)

. . . . .\(\displaystyle b^2t\, -\, 2b\, =\, 0\)

. . . . .\(\displaystyle b(bt\, -\, 2)\, =\, 0\)

. . . . .\(\displaystyle bt\, -\, 2\, =\, 0\)

. . . . .\(\displaystyle t\, =\, \dfrac{2}{b}\)

Now im not sure how i plug this back into the equation to get the y coordinates? this is the part im stuck on.
This is where having a proper functional statement is helpful. You have found the inputs, being the t-coordinates. Now plug those into the function in order to find the corresponding outputs, being the y- (or f-) coordinates.

. . . . .\(\displaystyle \mbox{turning point of }\, f(t)\, =\, ate^{-bt}\, \mbox{ at }\, t\, =\, \dfrac{1}{b}\, \mbox{ is given by:}\)

. . . . .\(\displaystyle f\left(\dfrac{1}{b}\right)\, =\, (a)\left(\dfrac{1}{b}\right)e^{-b\, \cdot\, \dfrac{1}{b}}\, =\, \dfrac{a}{b}\, e^{-\dfrac{b}{b}}\, =\, \dfrac{a}{be}\)

The same process is required for the remaining portion of the exercise. ;)
 
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Thanks a lot stapel, right what i wanted to know :)

on a side note how do your write your formulas like that, so in the future if i need a question is dosent look so messy?
 
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