Are the inflection points where f'(x) = zero or where the graph changes from concave up to concave down?
2 Answers
The inflection point is a point where the graph of the function changes from concave up to concave down or vice versa.
To calculate these points you have to find places where
For example to find the points of inflection for
Now we have to check where
We found that
To find if it is such point we have to check if
To find this we can graph the function:
graph{42x^5 [-3.894, 3.897, -1.95, 1.948]}
We can see that the
Note
It is important to check to see whether concavity actually changes.
Now we have to check where
We found that
To find if it is such point we have to check if
But
I have been taught and, following our textbook's lead, I continue to teach , that an inflection point is a point on the graph at which the concavity changes.
Explanation:
Using this terminology:
For
The function:
The concavity is not the same on the entire graph, but there is no inflection point, because there is no point on the graph at