Calculus (3rd Edition)

Published by W. H. Freeman
ISBN 10: 1464125260
ISBN 13: 978-1-46412-526-3

Chapter 2 - Limits - 2.1 Limits, Rates of Change, and Tangent Lines - Exercises - Page 45: 13

Answer

$-0.0625$

Work Step by Step

We are given the function: $y(x)=\dfrac{1}{x+2}$ The average rate of change on $[x_0,x_1]$ is: $\dfrac{\Delta y}{\Delta x}=\dfrac{y(x_1)-y(x_0)}{x_1-x_0}$ The instantaneous rate of change is the limit of the average rate of change. In order to estimate the instantaneous rate of of change at $x=2$, consider intervals $[x_1,x_0],[x_0,x_1]$ for $x_1$ close to $x_0$, where $x_0=2$: $[1.9,2]$: $\dfrac{\Delta y}{\Delta x}=\dfrac{y(1.9)-y(2)}{1.9-2}=\dfrac{\dfrac{1}{1.9+2}-\dfrac{1}{2+2}}{-0.1}\approx -0.064102564$ See table From the table we find that the instantaneous rate of of change at $x=2$ is approximately $-0.0625$.
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