What are the local extrema, if any, of f (x) =2ln(x^2+3)-x?

1 Answer
Jan 11, 2017

f(x) = 2ln(x^2+3) -x has a local minimum for x=1 and a local maximum for x=3

Explanation:

We have:

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

the function is defined in all of RR as x^2+3 > 0 AA x

We can identify the critical points by finding where the first derivative equals zero:

f'(x) = (4x)/(x^2+3)-1= - (x^2-4x+3)/(x^2+3)

- (x^2-4x+3)/(x^2+3) = 0

x^2-4x+3 = 0

x= 2+-sqrt(4-3)=2+-1

so the critical points are:

x_1 = 1 and x_2 = 3

Since the denominator is always positive, the sign of f'(x) is the opposite of the sign of the numerator (x^2-4x+3)

Now we know that a second order polynomial with positive leading coefficient is positive outside the interval comprised between the roots and negative in the interval between the roots, so that:

f'(x) < 0 for x in (-oo, 1) and x in (3,+oo)
f'(x) > 0 for x in (1,3)

We have then that f(x) is decreasing in (-oo, 1), increasing in (1,3), and again decreasing in (3,+oo), so that x_1 = 1 must be a local minimum and x_2=3 must be a local maximum.

graph{2ln(x^2+3) -x [-1.42, 8.58, -0.08, 4.92]}