I'm having trouble finding the Points of Inflection for this function

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Homework Statement


It asks for any Points of Inflection
The second derivative is given: y'' = (2x^5 + 4x^3 - 6x) / (x^2-1)^4

Homework Equations


The original function was x / (X^2 -1)

The Attempt at a Solution


I have set it equal to zero, and I get 2x^5 + 4x^3 - 6x = 0

I then simplified, taking out the 2, as well as factoring out an x

leaving me with

x(x^2 + 3)(x^2 -1)...

I get a weird answer though...x^2=-3 does not exist...and x = =+-1, are vertical asymptotes in the original function

help?

Homework Statement


Homework Equations


The Attempt at a Solution

 
Last edited:
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help...anyone ;_;
 
agv567 said:
help...anyone ;_;
Hi agv567. Welcome to PF.

Sometimes it takes a while for those of us who volunteer on the site to get around to answering questions. That's why there is a rule which forbids "bumping" your post until it has been here 24 hours.

I'll look at your question & get back to you soon.
 
agv567 said:

Homework Statement


It asks for any Points of Inflection
The second derivative is given: y'' = 2x^5 + 4x^2 - 6x / (x^2-1)^4
This can be simplified further. Also, are you sure the numerator isn't
2x5 + 4x3 - 6x?

agv567 said:
I then simplified, taking out the 2, as well as factoring out an x

leaving me with

x(x^2 + 3)(x^2 -1)...

I get a weird answer though...x^2=-3 does not exist...and x = =+-1, are vertical asymptotes in the original function
There's one more factor to check, the one in bold above.
 
EDIT: I'm an idiot

And POI can't occur at asymptotes, right? so -1 or 1 are not POI?

and x = 0...so the only POI occurs at (0,0), right? I checked with my calculator and it seems so.But what about the x^2 = -3 equation? Since it does not exist...I do nothing with it?
 
Last edited:
agv567 said:

Homework Statement


It asks for any Points of Inflection
The second derivative is given: y'' = 2x^5 + 4x^2 - 6x / (x^2-1)^4

Homework Equations


The original function was x / (X^2 -1)


The Attempt at a Solution


I have set it equal to zero, and I get 2x^5 + 4x^2 - 6x = 0

I then simplified, taking out the 2, as well as factoring out an x

leaving me with

x(x^2 + 3)(x^2 -1)...

I get a weird answer though...x^2=-3 does not exist...and x = =+-1, are vertical asymptotes in the original function

help?

You have a typo in that second derivative. It's y'' = (2x5 + 4x3 - 6x) / (x^2-1)^4

That should fix-up your problem!

Also, please use proper parentheses. Otherwise what you would have is equivalent to: \displaystyle 2x^5 + 4x^3 -\frac{6x}{(x^2-1)^4}
 
Thank you so much. I see my mistake now and how it confused everyone haha. I still don't understand what to do with the x^2 = -3, though.
 
x2=-3 doesn't have any real number solutions !
 
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