- #1
Amad27
- 412
- 1
I recently searched around SE, and found:
[How to solve this derivative of f proof][1] [1]: calculus - How to solve this derivative of f proof? - Mathematics Stack Exchange
The answer is interesting.
"A function given that $f(x)=f''(x)+f'(x)g(x)$ could be an exponential function, sine, cosine , quadratic polynomial or $f\equiv0$. So we can say that the function is a continuous function $\in C^2$.
The right negation is that $f(x)\ge0$ in $(a,b)$ and exist a point c | $f(c)>0$.
You have that $f''(x_1)\ge0$ (the function in that point is convex) so in that point you have a minima so there are two case
1. $f(x_1)<0$ (obviously contradiction)
2. $f(x_1)=0$ (it's impossible because this imply that $f(x)=0$ $ \forall x \in (a,b) $)
Analog for the other case"
But how does $f''(x_1) > 0$ show that $f(x_1) < 0$?
Thanks!
[How to solve this derivative of f proof][1] [1]: calculus - How to solve this derivative of f proof? - Mathematics Stack Exchange
The answer is interesting.
"A function given that $f(x)=f''(x)+f'(x)g(x)$ could be an exponential function, sine, cosine , quadratic polynomial or $f\equiv0$. So we can say that the function is a continuous function $\in C^2$.
The right negation is that $f(x)\ge0$ in $(a,b)$ and exist a point c | $f(c)>0$.
You have that $f''(x_1)\ge0$ (the function in that point is convex) so in that point you have a minima so there are two case
1. $f(x_1)<0$ (obviously contradiction)
2. $f(x_1)=0$ (it's impossible because this imply that $f(x)=0$ $ \forall x \in (a,b) $)
Analog for the other case"
But how does $f''(x_1) > 0$ show that $f(x_1) < 0$?
Thanks!