Calculus, 10th Edition (Anton)

Published by Wiley
ISBN 10: 0-47064-772-8
ISBN 13: 978-0-47064-772-1

Chapter 1 - Limits and Continuity - 1.1 Limits (An Intuitive Approach) - Exercises Set 1.1 - Page 61: 30

Answer

$y-1=-4(x+1)$ or $y=-4x-3$

Work Step by Step

Let the given point be $P(-1,1)$. Let the slope of the secant line from $P$ to a distinct point $Q(x,x^4)$ be $m$. $\implies m=\dfrac{x^4-1}{x+1}$ Now simplify $ m=\dfrac{x^4-1}{x+1}$. We get, $m=\dfrac{(x^2-1)(x^2+1)}{x+1}=\dfrac{(x-1)(x+1)(x^2+1)}{x+1}=(x-1)(x^2+1)$ If point $Q$ moves toward the point $P$ on the curve. Then, $x$ approaches $-1$. That means $m$ approaches to $-2\times2=-4$ We know that if $Q$ gets closer to $P$, then the slope of secant gets closer to the slope of the tangent at $P$. Hence, the slope of the tangent at $P$ is $-4$. Thus, the equation of the tangent line at $P$ can be written using point-slope form of a line as follows: $y-1=-4(x+1)$ or $y=-4x-3$
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