Calculus: Early Transcendentals 9th Edition

Published by Cengage Learning
ISBN 10: 1337613924
ISBN 13: 978-1-33761-392-7

Chapter 3 - Section 3.3 - Derivatives of Trigonometric Functions - 3.3 Exercises - Page 198: 33

Answer

(a) $f'(x) = sec~x~tan~x-1$ (b) We can see a sketch of the graphs below.

Work Step by Step

(a) $f(x) = sec~x-x$ $f'(x) = sec~x~tan~x-1$ (b) We can see a sketch of the graphs below. $f'(x)$ seems reasonable since $f'(x)$ has negative values when the slope of $f(x)$ has a negative slope, $f'(x)$ is 0 when the slope of $f(x)$ is 0, and $f'(x)$ has positive values when the slope of $f(x)$ has a positive slope.
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