Photo AI

The volume V cm³ of a box, of height x cm, is given by $$ V = 4x(5-x)^2 $$ , 0 < x < 5 (a) Find \( \frac{dV}{dx} \) - Edexcel - A-Level Maths Pure - Question 4 - 2011 - Paper 3

Question icon

Question 4

The-volume-V-cm³-of-a-box,-of-height-x-cm,-is-given-by--$$-V-=-4x(5-x)^2-$$--,-0-<-x-<-5--(a)-Find-\(-\frac{dV}{dx}-\)-Edexcel-A-Level Maths Pure-Question 4-2011-Paper 3.png

The volume V cm³ of a box, of height x cm, is given by $$ V = 4x(5-x)^2 $$ , 0 < x < 5 (a) Find \( \frac{dV}{dx} \). (b) Hence find the maximum volume of the box... show full transcript

Worked Solution & Example Answer:The volume V cm³ of a box, of height x cm, is given by $$ V = 4x(5-x)^2 $$ , 0 < x < 5 (a) Find \( \frac{dV}{dx} \) - Edexcel - A-Level Maths Pure - Question 4 - 2011 - Paper 3

Step 1

Find \( \frac{dV}{dx} \)

96%

114 rated

Answer

To find ( \frac{dV}{dx} ), we first apply the product rule of differentiation.

Let ( u = 4x ) and ( v = (5-x)^2 ). Then:

dVdx=dudxv+udvdx\frac{dV}{dx} = \frac{du}{dx} \cdot v + u \cdot \frac{dv}{dx}

Calculating ( \frac{du}{dx} ):

dudx=4\frac{du}{dx} = 4

Next, we compute ( \frac{dv}{dx} ):

Using the chain rule:

dvdx=2(5x)(1)=2(5x)\frac{dv}{dx} = 2(5-x)(-1) = -2(5-x)

Now plug these results into the product rule:

dVdx=4(5x)2+4x(2)(5x)\frac{dV}{dx} = 4(5-x)^2 + 4x(-2)(5-x)

Simplifying gives:

dVdx=4(5x)(5x2x)=4(5x)(53x)\frac{dV}{dx} = 4(5-x)(5-x - 2x) = 4(5-x)(5-3x)

Step 2

Hence find the maximum volume of the box.

99%

104 rated

Answer

To find the maximum volume, we need to set ( \frac{dV}{dx} = 0 ). From our earlier work:

4(5x)(53x)=04(5-x)(5-3x) = 0

This gives solutions:

  1. ( 5-x = 0 \Rightarrow x = 5 ) (not in range)
  2. ( 5-3x = 0 \Rightarrow x = \frac{5}{3} )

Next, we evaluate the volume at this critical point:

V(53)=453(553)2V \left( \frac{5}{3} \right) = 4 \cdot \frac{5}{3} \cdot \left( 5 - \frac{5}{3} \right)^2

Calculating further:

=453(103)2=4531009=200027 cm3= 4 \cdot \frac{5}{3} \cdot \left( \frac{10}{3} \right)^2 = 4 \cdot \frac{5}{3} \cdot \frac{100}{9} = \frac{2000}{27} \text{ cm}³

Thus, the maximum volume is ( \frac{2000}{27} \text{ cm}³ ).

Step 3

Use calculus to justify that the volume you found in part (b) is a maximum.

96%

101 rated

Answer

To confirm that ( \frac{5}{3} ) yields a maximum, we can use the second derivative test. We compute the second derivative:

d2Vdx2\frac{d^2V}{dx^2}

From our first derivative:

dVdx=4(5x)(53x)\frac{dV}{dx} = 4(5-x)(5-3x)

Differentiate again:

Using the product rule we find:

d2Vdx2=12(5x)+12(53x)d2Vdx2=12(53x)\frac{d^2V}{dx^2} = -12(5-x) + 12(5-3x) \Rightarrow \frac{d^2V}{dx^2} = -12(5-3x)

Now evaluate at ( x = \frac{5}{3} ):

d2Vdx2=12(55)=0\frac{d^2V}{dx^2} = -12 \cdot (5-5) = -0

To ensure concavity, check values around ( \frac{5}{3} ):

For ( x < \frac{5}{3} ), ( \frac{dV}{dx} > 0 ) (increasing) and for ( x > \frac{5}{3} ), ( \frac{dV}{dx} < 0 ) (decreasing).

Thus, ( x = \frac{5}{3} ) is indeed a maximum.

Join the A-Level students using SimpleStudy...

97% of Students

Report Improved Results

98% of Students

Recommend to friends

100,000+

Students Supported

1 Million+

Questions answered

;