What is the shortest distance from the point (-3,3) to the curve y=(x-3)^3?

2 Answers
Mar 21, 2018

d ~~ 6.265

Explanation:

Compute the first derivative of the curve:

dy/dx = 3(x-3)^2

The slope of the tangent line at any given x coordinate at the point of tangency, x_1, is

m = 3(x_1-3)^2

The slope of the normal line is:

n = -1/m = -1/(3(x_1-3)^2)

The y coordinate, y_1, at the point of nomalcy is:

y_1 = (x_1-3)^3

Using the point-slope form of the equation of a line, the equation of the normal line is:

y = -1/(3(x_1-3)^2)(x-x_1)+ (x_1-3)^3

We want the normal line to contain the point (-3,3):

3 = -1/(3(x_1-3)^2)(-3-x_1)+ (x_1-3)^3

I used WolframAlpha to solve this 5th order equation:

x_1 ~~ 2.278

The corresponding y coordinate is:

y_1 = (2.278-3)^3

y_1 ~~ -0.376

Use the distance formula:

d = sqrt((x_1-x_0)^2+(y_1-y_0)^2

d = sqrt((2.278+3)^2+(-0.376-3)^2)

d ~~ 6.265

Mar 21, 2018

Please see below.

Explanation:

Every point on the curve has coordinates (x, (x-3)^3) and the distance between such a point and the point (-3,3) is:

sqrt((x+3)^2+((x-3)^3-3)^2).

We can minimize the distance by minimizing the radicand:

f(x) = (x+3)^2+((x-3)^3-3)^2.

Differentiate:

f'(x) = 2(x+3) + 2((x-3)^3-3)(3(x-3)^2)

Use some technology or approximation method to get

x ~~ 2.278. (The other 4 solutions are imaginary.)

There cannot be a maximum. There is a minimum at this x.

Using the distance above, we find a minimum distance of approximately 6.266