Solve Inverse Function of g(x)=(x2/e)+2 ln(x)-e

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SUMMARY

The discussion centers on evaluating the inverse function g-1(2) for the function g(x) = (x2/e) + 2 ln(x) - e, defined on the interval (0, infinity). The key insight is that by substituting x = e into g(x), the result is g(e) = 2, establishing that g-1(2) = e. Participants emphasized the importance of recognizing the properties of logarithmic functions and the specific value of e in solving for the inverse.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of inverse functions
  • Familiarity with logarithmic properties, specifically ln(e) = 1
  • Basic calculus concepts, including function evaluation
  • Knowledge of the function g(x) = (x2/e) + 2 ln(x) - e
NEXT STEPS
  • Study the properties of one-to-one functions and their inverses
  • Learn how to evaluate logarithmic functions and their applications
  • Explore the concept of function composition and its relevance to inverses
  • Investigate other examples of finding inverse functions for complex equations
USEFUL FOR

Students studying calculus, mathematicians interested in function analysis, and anyone looking to deepen their understanding of inverse functions and logarithmic evaluations.

raptik
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Homework Statement


The function g(x) = (x2/e) + 2 ln(x) - e on (0,infinity) is one-to-one. Evaluate g-1(2)

Homework Equations


Find x in terms of y. Then switch x and y. Plug in 2 to the new equation.

The Attempt at a Solution


I can think of no way to get x explicitly in terms of y. I considered plugging in 2 to the original equation to get (x1,y1) and switching the two, but without a calculator, it seems unlikely to find a straightforward answer. Please help.
 
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The question only ask you to evaluate g^{-1}(2) it did not ask for a formula.

Think about what an inverse is if f(x) =y then f^{-1} (y) = ?.

Inverse "brings things back". If I throw a ball at you and "inverse" is you throwing the same ball at me, right ?
 
The answer choices are: A) 1 B) 2 C) e D) e2 E) 0

One of these is the correct "evaluation".

I follow that if f(x) =y then f-1 (y) = x

But when I don't know how to get to x, I'm not going to be able to solve this.
 
Have you considered finding g(e) ?
 
╔(σ_σ)╝ said:
Have you considered finding g(e) ?

Oh!

If I put x=e, then I get g(e) = 2. So (e,2). Then it's inverse is (2,e) which matches with g-1(2) to give me e. I see how that could work, but how did you have the intuition to add e to the original problem? I suppose it's a matter of plugging something that seems like it would give me the required value until it works. Thnx for help.
 
raptik said:
Oh!

If I put x=e, then I get g(e) = 2. So (e,2). Then it's inverse is (2,e) which matches with g-1(2) to give me e. I see how that could work, but how did you have the intuition to add e to the original problem? I suppose it's a matter of plugging something that seems like it would give me the required value until it works. Thnx for help.
When i looked at g i knew that the x^2 term would cause problems. I looked again at g and realized there was a 2 infront of lnx and i knew ln(e) =1. From there i realized that if i found g(e) i would get 2. ;-)
 

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