Thomas' Calculus 13th Edition

Published by Pearson
ISBN 10: 0-32187-896-5
ISBN 13: 978-0-32187-896-0

Chapter 7: Transcendental Functions - Section 7.2 - Natural Logarithms - Exercises 7.2 - Page 381: 70

Answer

$ a.\quad$ shown below $ b.\quad$ shown below

Work Step by Step

$ a.\quad$ $f(x)=x-\ln x$ $f'(x)=1-\displaystyle \frac{1}{x}$ When $ x\gt1$, the second term$, \displaystyle \frac{1}{x}$ is less than 1, so $f'(x)\gt 0 \quad $on $(1,\infty)$, which by definition, means that $f$ is increasing on $(1,\infty)$. $ b.\quad$ We find that $f(1)=1-0=1$ (the function value of x=1 is positive) By part (a), for any x greater than 1, f(x) is greater than f(1) (which is 1, which is positive), because f is increasing on $(1,\infty)$. So, on $(1,\infty)$ f(x) is positive $\quad x-\ln x\gt 0$, or $x \gt \ln x$, which we needed to show.
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