Is the following function differentiable?

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around the differentiability of a function at the point (0,2) and the conditions required for differentiability, including continuity and the behavior of partial derivatives.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants explore the conditions for differentiability, including continuity at the point in question and the evaluation of partial derivatives. There is a discussion on using Taylor expansion and the limits of partial derivatives as x approaches zero.

Discussion Status

Some participants express uncertainty about the continuity of the function at (0,2) and its implications for differentiability. Others are attempting to analyze the limits of partial derivatives but are encountering difficulties. There is no explicit consensus on the differentiability of the function yet.

Contextual Notes

Participants note the need to verify continuity and the behavior of partial derivatives at the point of interest, indicating potential complexities in the function's behavior near (0,2).

gipc
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I have:
http://img12.imageshack.us/img12/6121/capturerhf.png


Is the function differentiable in (0,2)? If so, find its Tangent Plane.

So far I have
We have [itex](\nabla f)(0,2)=(f_x(0,2).f_y(0,2))=\ldots=(0,1)[/itex] , so if [itex]f[/itex] is differentiable at [itex](0,2)[/itex] the only possible differential is [itex]\lambda (h,k)=(\nabla f)(0,2)(h,k)^t=k[/itex] .So I have to analyze [itex]\displaystyle\lim_{(h,k) \to (0,0)} \frac{|f(0+h,2+k)-f(0,2)-\lambda (h,k)|}{ \left\|{(h,k)}\right\|}=0[/itex] but I can't seem to solve it.

And I also don't know how to find a tangent plane
 
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I came to a conclusion that f is indeed differentiable.

Can someone please help me understand how to prove it? Someone suggested that i use the Taylor expansion but i don't know how to use it. So I'm hoping someone could show me :)
 
As a prerequisite, the function needs to be continuous at the point in question for a derivative to exist at that point. Is this function continuous at (x,y)=(0,2)?

Assuming it is continuous, this is a function of two variables, so you need to investigate both the partial with respect to x and with respect to y. For x not equal to zero you will get one pair of partial derivatives, for x equal to zero you will get another. Is the first set equal to the second set in the limit x→0?
 
when i try to take the partial derivatives i can't really take them to x->0 and i get stuck with the epsilon business.

The general steps for showing differentiability doesn't really apply here.
 

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