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About the Instructor Instructor: Dr. Jianli Xie Office hours: Mon. Thu. afternoon, or by appointment Contact: Office:

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Presentation on theme: "About the Instructor Instructor: Dr. Jianli Xie Office hours: Mon. Thu. afternoon, or by appointment Contact: Office:"— Presentation transcript:

1 About the Instructor Instructor: Dr. Jianli Xie Office hours: Mon. Thu. afternoon, or by appointment Contact: Email: xjl@sjtu.edu.cnxjl@sjtu.edu.cn Office: Math Building Rm.1211 TexPoint fonts used in EMF: A AA A AA

2 About the TAs Xie Jun: beiwei3_4803@hotmail.com Jiang Chen: bert@sjtu.edu.cn Liu Li: terriclisa@hotmail.com Wang Chengsheng: klaus19890602@hotmail.com TexPoint fonts used in EMF: A AA A AA

3 About the Course Course homepage SAKAI http://202.120.46.185:8080/portalhttp://202.120.46.185:8080/portal Grading policy 30%(HW)+35%(Midterm)+35%(Final) Important date Midterm (Oct. 21), Final exam (Dec. 10)

4 To The Student Attend to every lecture Ask questions during lectures Do not fall behind Do homework on time Presentation is critical

5 Ch.1 Functions and Models  Functions are the fundamental objects that we deal with in Calculus A function f is a rule that assigns to each element x in a set A exactly one element, called f(x), in a set B f: x 2 A ! y=f(x) 2 B x is independent variable, y is dependent variable A is domain of f, range of f is defined by {f(x)|x 2 A}

6 Variable independence  A function is independent of what variable is used Ex. Find f if Sol. Since we have f(x)=x 2 -2. Q: What is the domain of the above function f ? A: D(f)=R(x+1/x)=(- 1,-2] [ [2,+ 1 )

7 Example Ex. Find f if f(x)+2f(1-x)=x 2. Sol. Replacing x by 1-x, we obtain f(1-x)+2f(x)=(1-x) 2. From these two equations, we have

8 Representation of a function Description in words (verbally) Table of values (numerically) Graph (visually) Algebraic expression (algebraically) The Vertical Line Test A curve in the xy-plane is the graph of a function of x if and only if no vertical line intersects the curve more than once.

9 Example Ex. Find the domain and range of. Sol. 4-x 2 ¸ 0 ) –2 · x · 2 So the domain is. Since 0 · 4-x 2 · 4, the range is.

10 Piecewise defined functions Ex. A function f is defined by Evaluate f(0), f(1) and f(2) and sketch the graph. Sol. Since 0 · 1, we have f(0)=1-0=1. Since 1 · 1, we have f(1)=1-1=0. Since 2>1, we have f(2)=2 2 =4.

11 Piecewise defined functions The graph is as the following. Note that we use the open dot to indicate (1,1) is excluded from the graph.

12 Properties of functions Symmetry  even function: f(-x)=f(x)  odd function: f(-x)=-f(x) Monotony  increasing function: x 1 <x 2 ) f(x 1 )<f(x 2 )  decreasing function: x 1 f(x 2 )  Periodic function: f(x+T)=f(x)

13 Example Ex. Given, is it even, odd, or neither? Sol. Therefore, f is an odd function.

14 Example Ex. Given an increasing function f, let What is the relationship between A and B? Sol.

15 Essential functions I Polynomials (linear, quadratic, cubic……) Power functions Rational (P(x)/Q(x) with P,Q polynomials) Algebraic (algebraic operations of polynomials)

16 Essential functions II Trigonometric (sine, cosine, tangent……) Inverse trigonometric (arcsin,arccos,arctan……) Exponential functions ( ) Logarithmic functions ( )  Transcendental functions (non-algebraic)

17 New functions from old functions Transformations of functions f(x)+c, f(x+c), cf(x), f(cx) Combinations of functions (f+g)(x)=f(x)+g(x), (fg)(x)=f(x)g(x) Composition of functions

18 Example Ex. Find if f(x)=x/(x+1), g(x)=x 10, and h(x)=x+3. Sol.

19 Inverse functions  A function f is called a one-to-one function if  Let f be a one-to-one function with domain A and range B. Then its inverse function f -1 has domain B and range A and is defined by for any y in B. f(x 1 )  f(x 2 ) whenever x 1  x 2 f -1 (y)=x, f(x)=y

20 Example Ex. Find the inverse function of f(x)=x 3 +2. Sol. Solving y=x 3 +2 for x, we get Therefore, the inverse function is

21 Laws of exponential and logarithm Laws of exponential Laws of logarithm Relationship

22 e x and lnx  Natural exponential function e x  constant e ¼ 2.71828  Natural logarithmic function lnx  lnx=log e x

23 Graph of essential functions

24 Homework 1 Section 1.1: 24,27,36,66 Section 1.2: 3,4 Section 1.3: 37,44,52 Section 1.6: 18,20,28,51,68,71,72 TexPoint fonts used in EMF: A AA A AA


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