Is a Tangent Line Possible in a Cubed Function?

Mejiera
Messages
15
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement



is it possible to have a tangent line in a cubed function

Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution

 
Physics news on Phys.org
Simply put, if you can differentiate it, it has tangent lines. So you can have tangent lines for things that aren't functions too.
 
but the tangent line touches a cubed function twice so I am sure if it could really be called a tangent line
 
Mejiera said:
but the tangent line touches a cubed function twice so I am sure if it could really be called a tangent line
Doesn't matter. The tangent line is just a line that touches a curve at a point (a, f(a)) and whose slope is f'(a). The fact that the tangent line happens to intersect the graph of the function somewhere else is immaterial. Pretty much every odd-degree polynomial will have a tangent line that intersectst the curve somewhere else.

As it turns out, the tangent line to the graph of y = f(x) = 2x + 3 at any point happens to completely coincide with the graph of this function, but that doesn't keep it from being a tangent line.
 
In addition to what Mark44 said, I will point out that the tangent line can even intersect/cross the curve AT the point of tangency. For example, the tangent to f(x) = x^3 at x = 0. It's still a tangent line, though.
 
ok thanks for clearing that up guys.
 
Back
Top