The document contains solved problems covering various topics in calculus, including limits, continuity, differentiation, integration, and vector operations. Key solutions include evaluating limits, checking function continuity, finding derivatives from first principles, and solving differential equations. Additionally, it addresses graphing functions, finding asymptotes, and determining critical points and their classifications.
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MATH II_SOLVED PROBLEMS
The document contains solved problems covering various topics in calculus, including limits, continuity, differentiation, integration, and vector operations. Key solutions include evaluating limits, checking function continuity, finding derivatives from first principles, and solving differential equations. Additionally, it addresses graphing functions, finding asymptotes, and determining critical points and their classifications.
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SOLVED PROBLEMS
1. Define a limit and evaluate: lim (x → 3) (x³ − 2x² + 5x − 7)
Solution: The limit of a function describes the value that the function approaches as the input approaches a particular value. To evaluate: f(x) = x³ − 2x² + 5x − 7 Substitute x = 3 into the function: f(3) = 3³ − 2(3²) + 5(3) − 7 = 27 − 18 + 15 − 7 = 17 So, lim (x → 3) (x³ − 2x² + 5x − 7) = 17. 2. Check the continuity of the function: f(x) = {x² if x < 1, x + 2 if x ≥ 1} at x = 1 Solution: For continuity at x = 1, the following must hold: 1. f(1) must exist. 2. lim (x → 1⁻) f(x) = lim (x → 1⁺) f(x). 3. f(1) = lim (x → 1) f(x). f(1): From the second piece of the function (x + 2), f(1) = 1 + 2 = 3. lim (x → 1⁻) f(x): As x → 1⁻, we use f(x) = x². lim (x → 1⁻) f(x) = 1² = 1. lim (x → 1⁺) f(x): As x → 1⁺, we use f(x) = x + 2. lim (x → 1⁺) f(x) = 1 + 2 = 3. Since lim (x → 1⁻) ≠ lim (x → 1⁺), the function is not continuous at x = 1. 3. Differentiate from first principles: f(x) = 3x² − 4x + 5 Solution: Using the definition of derivative: f'(x) = lim (h → 0) [(f(x + h) − f(x))/h] Substitute f(x) = 3x² − 4x + 5: f'(x) = lim (h → 0) [(3(x + h)² − 4(x + h) + 5 − (3x² − 4x + 5))/h] Expand (x + h)² and simplify: = lim (h → 0) [(3(x² + 2xh + h²) − 4x − 4h + 5 − 3x² + 4x − 5)/h] = lim (h → 0) [(3x² + 6xh + 3h² − 4x − 4h + 5 − 3x² + 4x − 5)/h] Cancel out terms: = lim (h → 0) [(6xh + 3h² − 4h)/h] Factor h: = lim (h → 0) [6x + 3h − 4] As h → 0: f'(x) = 6x − 4 4. Differentiate the following: (a) y = e²x + ln(3x) Solution: Using the chain rule and derivative rules: dy/dx = d/dx(e²x) + d/dx(ln(3x)) dy/dx = 2e²x + (1/3x) * 3 dy/dx = 2e²x + 1/x (b) y = tan⁻¹(x) − cot⁻¹(x) Solution: Using the derivatives of inverse trigonometric functions: d/dx(tan⁻¹(x)) = 1/(1 + x²) d/dx(cot⁻¹(x)) = −1/(1 + x²) So: dy/dx = 1/(1 + x²) − (−1/(1 + x²)) dy/dx = 2/(1 + x²) 5. Sketch the graph of f(x) = 1/x². Identify the vertical and horizontal asymptotes. Solution: For f(x) = 1/x², the graph is symmetric about the y-axis. As x → 0, f(x) → ∞ (vertical asymptote at x = 0). As x → ±∞, f(x) → 0 (horizontal asymptote at y = 0). 6. Plot the graph of y = 3x − 1 and state its domain and range. Solution: The graph of y = 3x − 1 is a straight line with slope 3 and y-intercept −1. Domain: All real numbers (−∞, ∞). Range: All real numbers (−∞, ∞). 7. Compute the definite integral: ∫_0^2 (x³ − 2x² + x) dx Solution: Split the integral: ∫_0^2 (x³ − 2x² + x) dx = ∫_0^2 x³ dx − ∫_0^2 2x² dx + ∫_0^2 x dx = [(x⁴/4) − (2x³/3) + (x²/2)] from 0 to 2 Evaluate at x = 2 and x = 0: At x = 2: [(2⁴/4) − (2(2³)/3) + (2²/2)] = [4 − (16/3) + 2] = (12 − 16 + 6)/3 = 2/3. At x = 0: = 0. Value: 2/3 8. Evaluate by substitution: ∫ (x)/(x² + 4) dx Solution: Let u = x² + 4, so du/dx = 2x or dx = du/(2x). Substitute: ∫ (x)/(x² + 4) dx = ∫ x/u * (du/(2x)) = (1/2) ∫ (1/u) du = (1/2) ln|u| + C Back-substitute u = x² + 4: = (1/2) ln|x² + 4| + C 9. Solve the differential equation: dy/dx = 2x + 1, given that y = 3 when x = 0. Solution: Integrate both sides: y = ∫(2x + 1) dx = x² + x + C Using the condition y = 3 when x = 0: 3 = 0² + 0 + C C=3 So: y = x² + x + 3 10. Solve the equation: dy/dx + 2y = sin(x) Solution: This is a first-order linear differential equation. Use the integrating factor: IF = e^(∫2 dx) = e^(2x) Multiply through by e^(2x): e^(2x) dy/dx + 2e^(2x)y = e^(2x)sin(x) The left-hand side is the derivative of (e^(2x)y): d/dx(e^(2x)y) = e^(2x)sin(x) Integrate both sides: e^(2x)y = ∫e^(2x)sin(x) dx This integral requires integration by parts, leading to the solution. For brevity, the solution involves exponential and trigonometric terms. 11. If a = 2i − j + k and b = −i + 3j − 2k, find: (a) a + b Solution: Add the corresponding components: a + b = (2i − j + k) + (−i + 3j − 2k) = (2 − 1)i + (−1 + 3)j + (1 − 2)k = i + 2j − k (b) a × b Solution: The cross product is computed using the determinant of a 3x3 matrix: a×b=|ijk| ** | 2 −1 1 |** ** | −1 3 −2|** Expand: a × b = i((−1)(−2) − (3)(1)) − j((2)(−2) − (1)(−1)) + k((2)(3) − (−1)(−1)) = i(2 − 3) − j(−4 + 1) + k(6 − 1) = −i − 3j + 5k So, a × b = −i − 3j + 5k. 12. Find the angle between the vectors: a = i + 2j − k and b = 2i − j + k Solution: The angle between two vectors is given by: cos(θ) = (a · b) / (|a| |b|) 1. a · b (dot product): a · b = (1)(2) + (2)(−1) + (−1)(1) = 2 − 2 − 1 = −1 2. |a| (magnitude of a): |a| = √(1² + 2² + (−1)²) = √(1 + 4 + 1) = √6 3. |b| (magnitude of b): |b| = √(2² + (−1)² + 1²) = √(4 + 1 + 1) = √6 Now: cos(θ) = (−1) / (√6 * √6) = −1 / 6 θ = cos⁻¹(−1/6) 13. Find the equation of the line passing through the points: (3, −1) and (5, 2) Solution: The slope of the line is: m = (y₂ − y₁) / (x₂ − x₁) = (2 − (−1)) / (5 − 3) = 3 / 2 Using the point-slope form of a line, y − y₁ = m(x − x₁): y − (−1) = (3/2)(x − 3) y + 1 = (3/2)x − 9/2 y = (3/2)x − 9/2 − 2/2 y = (3/2)x − 11/2 The equation is: y = (3/2)x − 11/2. 14. Find the equation of the tangent to the circle: x² + y² = 16 at the point (2√3, 2) Solution: The general equation of the tangent to a circle at a point (x₁, y₁) is: x₁x + y₁y = r² Here, r² = 16, and the point is (2√3, 2): (2√3)x + (2)y = 16 Simplify: 2√3x + 2y = 16 Divide through by 2: √3x + y = 8 The equation of the tangent is: √3x + y = 8. 15. Evaluate: lim (θ → 0) (1 − cos(θ)) / θ² Solution: Using the trigonometric identity 1 − cos(θ) = 2sin²(θ/2): lim (θ → 0) (1 − cos(θ)) / θ² = lim (θ → 0) [2sin²(θ/2)] / θ² Substitute u = θ/2, so θ = 2u and dθ = 2du: = lim (u → 0) [2sin²(u)] / (2u)² = lim (u → 0) [2sin²(u)] / 4u² = (1/2) lim (u → 0) [sin²(u) / u²] Using lim (u → 0) (sin(u)/u) = 1: = (1/2)(1²) = 1/2 So, lim (θ → 0) (1 − cos(θ)) / θ² = 1/2. 16. State whether the function is continuous at x = 0: f(x) = {sin(x) if x > 0, x² if x ≤ 0} Solution: For continuity at x = 0, we check: 1. f(0): From the second piece, f(0) = 0² = 0. 2. lim (x → 0⁻) f(x): For x ≤ 0, f(x) = x², so: lim (x → 0⁻) f(x) = 0² = 0. 3. lim (x → 0⁺) f(x): For x > 0, f(x) = sin(x), so: lim (x → 0⁺) f(x) = sin(0) = 0. Since f(0) = lim (x → 0⁻) = lim (x → 0⁺), the function is continuous at x = 0. 17. Find the critical points of f(x) = x³ − 3x² − 9x + 15 and classify them. Solution: 1. Find f'(x): f'(x) = 3x² − 6x − 9 2. Solve f'(x) = 0: 3x² − 6x − 9 = 0 Divide by 3: x² − 2x − 3 = 0 Factorize: (x − 3)(x + 1) = 0 Critical points: x = 3, x = −1 3. Classify using the second derivative: f''(x) = 6x − 6 At x = −1: f''(−1) = 6(−1) − 6 = −12 (negative) → Local maximum. At x = 3: f''(3) = 6(3) − 6 = 12 (positive) → Local minimum. Critical points: Local maximum at x = −1 Local minimum at x = 3 18. Find the equation of the normal to the curve: y = 3x² − 5x + 2 at x = 1 Solution: 1. Find dy/dx: dy/dx = 6x − 5 At x = 1: slope of tangent = 6(1) − 5 = 1 The slope of the normal is the negative reciprocal: m = −1 2. Point on the curve at x = 1: y = 3(1)² − 5(1) + 2 = 0 Equation of the normal: y − y₁ = m(x − x₁) y − 0 = −1(x − 1) y = −x + 1 19. Evaluate: (a) ∫ 1/(x² + 9) dx Solution: This is a standard integral: ∫ 1/(x² + a²) dx = (1/a) tan⁻¹(x/a) + C Here, a = 3: ∫ 1/(x² + 9) dx = (1/3) tan⁻¹(x/3) + C (b) ∫ (x² − 1)/(x² + 2x + 1) dx Solution: Factorize the denominator: x² + 2x + 1 = (x + 1)² Split the fraction: ∫ (x² − 1)/(x + 1)² dx = ∫ [(x² + 2x + 1 − 2x − 2)/(x + 1)²] dx = ∫ [1 − 2/(x + 1)] dx Integrate: = ∫ 1 dx − 2∫ 1/(x + 1) dx = x − 2ln|x + 1| + C