What are the absolute extrema of f(x)=x / e^(x^2) in[1,oo]?

1 Answer
Aug 15, 2017

(1, 1/e) is an absolute maximum in the given domain
There is no minimum

Explanation:

The derivative is given by

f'(x) = (1(e^(x^2)) - x(2x)e^(x^2))/(e^(x^2))^2

f'(x) = (e^(x^2) - 2x^2e^(x^2))/(e^(x^2))^2

Critical values will occur when the derivative equals 0 or is undefined. The derivative will never be undefined (because e^(x^2) and x are continuous functions and e^(x^2) != 0 for any value of x.

So if f'(x) = 0:

0 = e^(x^2) - 2x^2e^(x^2)

0 = e^(x^2)(1 - 2x^2)

As mentioned above e^(x^2) will never equal 0, so our only two critical numbers will occur at the solution of

0 = 1 -2x^2

2x^2 = 1

x^2 = 1/2

x = +- sqrt(1/2) = +- 1/sqrt(2)

But neither of these lie in our given domain. Therefore, x = 1 is going to be a maximum (because f(x) converges to 0 as x->+oo).

There will be no minimum

Hopefully this helps!