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Multiple Choice
Find the critical points of the given function. f(x)=2−x2
A
x=0
B
C
x=0,x=2
D
No critical points
Verified step by step guidance
1
First, understand that critical points occur where the derivative of the function is zero or undefined. We need to find the derivative of the function f(x) = √(2 - x^2).
To find the derivative, apply the chain rule. The outer function is the square root, and the inner function is (2 - x^2). The derivative of the square root function √u is (1/2√u) * du/dx.
Calculate the derivative of the inner function (2 - x^2), which is -2x. Now, apply the chain rule: f'(x) = (1/2√(2 - x^2)) * (-2x).
Simplify the expression for the derivative: f'(x) = -x / √(2 - x^2).
Set the derivative equal to zero to find where it is zero: -x / √(2 - x^2) = 0. Solve for x to find the critical points. Additionally, check where the derivative is undefined, which occurs when the denominator is zero, i.e., when 2 - x^2 = 0.