AP Calculus AB Unit 5 Notes: Using Derivatives to Understand Function Behavior

0.0(0)
Studied by 0 people
0%Unit 5 Mastery
0%Exam Mastery
Build your Mastery score
multiple choiceMultiple Choice
call kaiCall Kai
Supplemental Materials
Card Sorting

1/24

Last updated 3:08 PM on 3/12/26
Name
Mastery
Learn
Test
Matching
Spaced
Call with Kai

No analytics yet

Send a link to your students to track their progress

25 Terms

1
New cards

Increasing (on an interval)

A function is increasing on an interval if for any a < b in the interval, f(a) < f(b) (outputs rise as x moves left to right).

2
New cards

Decreasing (on an interval)

A function is decreasing on an interval if for any a < b in the interval, f(a) > f(b) (outputs fall as x moves left to right).

3
New cards

First derivative (f′)

The derivative that gives the instantaneous rate of change of f (the slope of the tangent line).

4
New cards

Derivative sign test for increasing/decreasing

If f′(x) > 0 on an interval, f is increasing there; if f′(x) < 0 on an interval, f is decreasing there.

5
New cards

Horizontal tangent (f′(c)=0)

A point where the tangent slope is zero; it does not automatically mean a local maximum or minimum.

6
New cards

Critical number

An x-value in the domain of f where either f′(x)=0 or f′(x) does not exist.

7
New cards

Test intervals

Intervals formed by splitting the domain at critical numbers (and where f′ is discontinuous), used to test the sign of f′ or f′′.

8
New cards

Sign chart

A chart/analysis showing where a derivative is positive or negative on each test interval to determine behavior (increase/decrease or concavity).

9
New cards

Interval notation (for behavior)

Increasing/decreasing and concavity are stated on intervals (e.g., (1,3)), not “at a point.”

10
New cards

Domain restriction

A limitation where f is not defined at certain x-values; you cannot claim increasing/decreasing or concavity “through” a point not in the domain.

11
New cards

Endpoint (closed interval context)

An endpoint of [a,b] lacks a two-sided neighborhood inside the interval but must still be considered for absolute extrema on [a,b].

12
New cards

Local maximum

A point x=c where f(c) is greater than nearby function values.

13
New cards

Local minimum

A point x=c where f(c) is less than nearby function values.

14
New cards

First Derivative Test

Classifies a critical number c by how f′ changes sign around c: +→− gives a local max; −→+ gives a local min; no sign change gives no local extremum.

15
New cards

No sign change (First Derivative Test outcome)

If f′ is the same sign on both sides of a critical number, f has no local maximum/minimum there (it may just flatten).

16
New cards

Concave up

The graph bends like a cup; slopes tend to increase as x increases. Occurs where f′′(x) > 0.

17
New cards

Concave down

The graph bends like a cap; slopes tend to decrease as x increases. Occurs where f′′(x) < 0.

18
New cards

Second derivative (f′′)

The derivative of f′; measures how the slope changes and is used to determine concavity.

19
New cards

Point of inflection

A point on the graph where concavity changes (from up to down or down to up).

20
New cards

Inflection point candidate

An x-value where f′′(x)=0 or f′′(x) does not exist; it is only an inflection point if concavity actually changes.

21
New cards

Concavity sign test (using f′′)

To find concavity, split the domain at where f′′=0/undefined and test the sign of f′′ on each interval.

22
New cards

Tangent line position and concavity

If f is concave up, tangent lines tend to lie below the graph; if f is concave down, tangent lines tend to lie above the graph.

23
New cards

Second Derivative Test

At a critical point c with f′(c)=0 and f′′(c) existing: f′′(c)>0 implies local min; f′′(c)<0 implies local max; f′′(c)=0 is inconclusive.

24
New cards

Inconclusive (Second Derivative Test)

When f′′(c)=0 (or the needed condition fails), the Second Derivative Test cannot decide; another method (often the First Derivative Test) is needed.

25
New cards

Derivative graph interpretation (f′ graph)

Where f′ is above the x-axis, f is increasing; where f′ is below, f is decreasing; where f′ crosses the x-axis, f′ changes sign and f may have a local extremum.

Explore top notes

note
Biology - Evolution
Updated 1484d ago
0.0(0)
note
History of England
Updated 1283d ago
0.0(0)
note
KOREAN - IMPORTANT VOCABULARY
Updated 1262d ago
0.0(0)
note
iPhone SE 4_ What To Expect.mp4
Updated 936d ago
0.0(0)
note
Photons
Updated 908d ago
0.0(0)
note
Factorisation (copy)
Updated 1081d ago
0.0(0)
note
Biology - Evolution
Updated 1484d ago
0.0(0)
note
History of England
Updated 1283d ago
0.0(0)
note
KOREAN - IMPORTANT VOCABULARY
Updated 1262d ago
0.0(0)
note
iPhone SE 4_ What To Expect.mp4
Updated 936d ago
0.0(0)
note
Photons
Updated 908d ago
0.0(0)
note
Factorisation (copy)
Updated 1081d ago
0.0(0)

Explore top flashcards

flashcards
faf
40
Updated 964d ago
0.0(0)
flashcards
faf
40
Updated 964d ago
0.0(0)