Figure 2 shows a sketch of part of the curve with equation
$$g(x) = x^2(1 - x)e^{-2x}, \, x > 0$$
(a) Show that $g'(x) = f(x)e^{-2x}$, where $f(x)$ is a cubic function to be found - Edexcel - A-Level Maths Pure - Question 8 - 2015 - Paper 3
Question 8
Figure 2 shows a sketch of part of the curve with equation
$$g(x) = x^2(1 - x)e^{-2x}, \, x > 0$$
(a) Show that $g'(x) = f(x)e^{-2x}$, where $f(x)$ is a cubic func... show full transcript
Worked Solution & Example Answer:Figure 2 shows a sketch of part of the curve with equation
$$g(x) = x^2(1 - x)e^{-2x}, \, x > 0$$
(a) Show that $g'(x) = f(x)e^{-2x}$, where $f(x)$ is a cubic function to be found - Edexcel - A-Level Maths Pure - Question 8 - 2015 - Paper 3
Step 1
Show that $g'(x) = f(x)e^{-2x}$, where $f(x)$ is a cubic function to be found.
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Answer
To find the derivative of g(x)=x2(1−x)e−2x, we will use the product rule and the chain rule.
Calculate the first part: Let
u=x2(1−x)extandv=e−2x
Applying the product rule:
= e^{-2x}(-x^2 + 2x^3)$$
Thus, we can let $$f(x) = -x^2 + 2x^3$$, which is a cubic function.
Step 2
Hence find the range of g.
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Answer
To find the range of the function g(x)=x2(1−x)e−2x, we analyze the behavior of g(x) as follows:
Find critical points by setting the derivative g′(x) to zero:
g′(x)=e−2x(2x3−3x2)=0
This implies:
2x3−3x2=0
Factor to get:
x2(2x−3)=0
This yields critical points at x=0 and x = rac{3}{2}.
Evaluate g(x) at these points:
At x=0:
g(0)=02(1−0)e−0=0
At x = rac{3}{2}:
gigg(rac{3}{2}igg) = igg(rac{3}{2}igg)^2igg(1 - rac{3}{2}igg)e^{-3} = rac{9}{4}igg(-rac{1}{2}igg)e^{-3} = -rac{9}{8}e^{-3}
Since g(x)o0 as xoextlarge, we will next find if there is a maximum value.
Consider the behaviour asxoextlarge:
As x increases, g(x) approaches 0 from the positive side.
Hence, the function achieves a maximum somewhere between the critical points.
Thus, the range of g(x) is
[0, -rac{9}{8}e^{-3}] for x>0.
Step 3
State a reason why the function $g^{-1}(y)$ does not exist.
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Answer
The function g(x) is not one-to-one (injective) since it has multiple x values producing the same y output.
Analyzing the graph: From the graph in Figure 2, it is clear that g(x) is a many-to-one function due to the presence of turning points.
Conclusion: Hence, g−1(y) does not exist because it doesn't satisfy the criteria for invertibility where every output y corresponds to exactly one input x.