transgalactic Posted January 21, 2009 Posted January 21, 2009 i am given two differentiable function f and g . prove that for u(x)=max(f(x),g(x)) and v(x)=min(f(x),g(x)) there is one sided derivatives ??
D H Posted January 21, 2009 Posted January 21, 2009 transgalactic, You should have posted this in the Homework Help section and you should read the rules for homework: A simple reminder to all: this is the "Homework Help" forum, not the "Homework Answers" forum. We will not do your work for you, only point you in the right direction. Posts that do give you the answers may be deleted. This site is for helping you learn more about science, not for helping you cheat on your science homework. Please show some work.
transgalactic Posted January 24, 2009 Author Posted January 24, 2009 how to use this hint {x:f(x)>g(x)} is open
transgalactic Posted January 31, 2009 Author Posted January 31, 2009 (edited) this is the only equations i can construct [math] \mathop {\mathop {\lim }\limits_{x \to x_0 - } \frac{{f(x_{} ) - f(x_0 )}}{{x - x_0 }} = \mathop {\lim }\limits_{x \to x_0 + } \frac{{f(x_{} ) - f(x_0 )}}{{x - x_0 }}}\limits_{} \\ [/math] [math] \mathop {\mathop {\lim }\limits_{x \to x_0 - } \frac{{g(x_{} ) - g(x_0 )}}{{x - x_0 }} = \mathop {\lim }\limits_{x \to x_0 + } \frac{{g(x_{} ) - g(x_0 )}}{{x - x_0 }}}\limits_{} \\ [/math] "if u(x) = f(x)) then there exists an [math]\epsilon > 0[/math] such that u(y) = f(y) for all [math]y \in [x, x + \epsilon)[/math]. So then [math]u'(x)_+ = f'(x)[/math]." i dont know how to apply this this to my question i showed the differentiation equations i dont know how to continue. Merged post follows: Consecutive posts mergedso u(x) and v(x) around x_0 have to pick different functions because if one is bigger then the other is smaller. so if f(x)=u(x) then g(x)=v(x) and once again because f(x) and g(x) are differentiable then we have one sided derivative. i dont know how to write it thematically but here is a try [math] \forall x_0 \in R [/math] [math] {\rm{ }}\exists \delta {\rm{ > 0 |x - x}}_0 | < \delta {\rm{ }}\mathop {\lim }\limits_{x \to x_0 } u(x) = \mathop {\lim }\limits_{x \to x_0 } v(x) [/math] Edited January 31, 2009 by transgalactic Consecutive posts merged.
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