How do you determine whether the function #f(x)=x^8(ln(x))# is concave up or concave down and its intervals?

1 Answer
Oct 15, 2015

See the explanation.

Explanation:

The intervals of concavity are determined by 2nd derivative. If 2nd derivative changes sign in the points where it is equal to zero, those points are inflection points.

#D_f=R^+#

#f'(x)=8x^7lnx+x^8 1/x=8x^7lnx+x^7=x^7(8lnx+1)#

#f''(x)=7x^6(8lnx+1)+x^7 8/x=7x^6(8lnx+1)+8x^6#

#f''(x)=x^6(56lnx+15)#

#f''(x)=0 <=> x^6(56lnx+15)=0 <=>#

#<=> (x^6=0 vv 56lnx+15=0)#

#x^6=0 <=> x=0 !in D_f#

#56lnx+15=0 <=> 56lnx=-15 <=> lnx=-15/56 <=>#

#<=> x=e^(-15/56) <=> x=1/root(56)(e^15) ~~ 0.765>0 in D_f#

#AAx in (0,1/root(56)(e^15)): f''(x)<0# function is concave down

#AAx in (1/root(56)(e^15), oo): f''(x)>0# function is concave up

Note: the sign of #f''(x)# depends only on #56lnx+15# since #x^6# is always greater then zero for #x>0#.