Chapter 16: Curve Tracing and Polar Coordinates (Set-5)

For f(x)=x4−4x2f(x)=x4−4×2, which xx-values are inflexion candidates from f′′(x)=0f′′(x)=0?

A x=±13x=±31
B x=±1x=±1
C x=±2x=±2
D x=±23x=±32

For f(x)=x2x2+1f(x)=x2+1×2, the graph is concave up on

A (0,13)(0,31)
B (13,∞)(31,∞)
C (0,∞)(0,∞)
D (−∞,∞)(−∞,∞)

For f(x)=x2x2+1f(x)=x2+1×2, inflexion points occur at

A x=±1x=±1
B x=±13x=±31
C x=0x=0 only
D No inflexion

For y=1xy=x1, the curve is concave up on

A (−∞,0)(−∞,0)
B Both intervals
C Neither interval
D (0,∞)(0,∞)

For y=ln⁡(1+x)y=ln(1+x), the curve is concave down on its domain because

A y′>0y′>0 always
B y=0y=0 at 0
C y′′<0y′′<0 always
D y′y′ constant

A rational function has horizontal asymptote y=0y=0 when

A Top degree larger
B Degrees equal
C Difference equals one
D Top degree smaller

For f(x)=2×2+3×2−5f(x)=x2−52×2+3, the horizontal asymptote is

A y=2y=2
B y=3y=3
C y=5y=5
D y=0y=0

For f(x)=x3+1x2f(x)=x2x3+1, the slant asymptote is

A y=x+1x2y=x+x21
B y=xy=x
C y=x+1xy=x+x1
D y=1xy=x1

For f(x)=x3x2−1f(x)=x2−1×3, the asymptote type for large ∣x∣∣x∣ is

A Horizontal line
B Vertical line
C No asymptote
D Slant line

For f(x)=x2−1×2−4f(x)=x2−4×2−1, vertical asymptotes are

A x=±2x=±2
B x=±1x=±1
C x=0x=0 only
D None

A function can have f′′(a)=0f′′(a)=0 but not an inflexion because

A Slope must vanish
B Domain must end
C No sign change
D Asymptote appears

If f′(a)=0f′(a)=0, f′′(a)=0f′′(a)=0, but f′′′(a)≠0f′′′(a)=0, then aa is typically a

A Local maximum
B Local minimum
C Vertical asymptote
D Stationary inflexion

For y=x4y=x4, x=0x=0 fails to be inflexion mainly because

A y′y′ never zero
B y′′y′′ never negative
C yy undefined at 0
D Asymptote exists

The curvature of a parametric curve uses

A x′,y′,x′′,y′′x′,y′,x′′,y′′
B Only x′x′
C Only y′y′
D Only x′′x′′

For x=t,  y=t2x=t,y=t2, curvature at t=0t=0 is

A 1
B 0
C ∞∞
D 2

For y=x2y=x2, radius of curvature at x=0x=0 equals

A 22
B 11
C 1/21/2
D 00

The center of curvature lies on the normal because the osculating circle’s radius is

A Perpendicular to tangent
B Parallel to tangent
C Along asymptote
D Along x-axis

In implicit curve tracing, if both FxFx and FyFy are zero at a point, then that point is

A Regular point
B Horizontal asymptote
C Vertical asymptote
D Singular point

A node (double point) on an algebraic curve is where the curve has

A One tangent only
B Two real tangents
C No tangent
D Horizontal asymptote

A cusp point differs from a node because at a cusp the tangents are

A Coincident direction
B Two distinct lines
C Always horizontal
D Always vertical

For the polar curve r=2acos⁡θr=2acosθ, the circle’s radius is

A 2a2a
B a/2a/2
C aa
D 4a4a

For r=a(1+cos⁡θ)r=a(1+cosθ), the curve crosses the pole when

A θ=0θ=0
B θ=π/2θ=π/2
C θ=2πθ=2π
D θ=πθ=π

For r=a(1−cos⁡θ)r=a(1−cosθ), maximum rr occurs at

A θ=πθ=π
B θ=0θ=0
C θ=π/2θ=π/2
D θ=2πθ=2π

A polar curve has symmetry about θ=π/2θ=π/2 if the equation is unchanged under

A θ→−θθ→−θ
B θ→π−θθ→π−θ
C θ→θ+πθ→θ+π
D r→r+1r→r+1

For r=acos⁡θr=cosθa, the Cartesian form is

A y=ay=a
B x2+y2=a2x2+y2=a2
C y=xy=x
D x=ax=a

For r=asin⁡θr=sinθa, the Cartesian form is

A y=ay=a
B x=ax=a
C y=xy=x
D Circle at origin

A polar asymptote direction θ=αθ=α is suspected when

A r=0r=0 at αα
B rr constant at αα
C r→∞r→∞ at αα
D r<0r<0 at αα

For parametric curves, a double point occurs if

A Same point, same tt
B Only xx repeats
C Only yy repeats
D Same point, different tt

If x′(t)=0x′(t)=0 and y′(t)≠0y′(t)=0, the parametric tangent is

A Vertical tangent
B Horizontal tangent
C No tangent
D Slant asymptote

If y′(t)=0y′(t)=0 and x′(t)≠0x′(t)=0, the parametric tangent is

A Vertical tangent
B Horizontal tangent
C No tangent
D Pole tangent

For a function ff convex on an interval, Jensen’s inequality (intro) broadly states

A ff(average) ≥ average ff
B ff constant only
C No inequality exists
D ff(average) ≤ average ff

A convex function’s graph lies

A Below chords
B Above chords
C On chords always
D Crossing chords only

Concave down graphs satisfy the geometric property that the graph lies

A Below chords
B On chords only
C Above chords
D Not comparable

For f(x)=1x2f(x)=x21, concavity on (0,∞)(0,∞) is

A Concave down
B Changes once
C No concavity
D Concave up

For f(x)=1x2f(x)=x21, concavity on (−∞,0)(−∞,0) is

A Concave down
B Concave up
C Changes once
D Undefined there

For f(x)=xx2+1f(x)=x2+1x, horizontal asymptote is

A y=0y=0
B y=1y=1
C y=xy=x
D x=0x=0

For f(x)=xx2+1f(x)=x2+1x, the function is odd, so the graph has symmetry about

A y-axis
B x-axis
C x=1x=1 line
D Origin

In curve tracing, “intersection with asymptotes” is found by solving

A Denominator =0
B Curve minus line =0
C Numerator =0
D f′(x)=0f′(x)=0

For f(x)=x2+1×2−1f(x)=x2−1×2+1, the vertical asymptotes are

A x=±1x=±1
B x=±ix=±i
C x=0x=0
D None

For f(x)=x2+1×2−1f(x)=x2−1×2+1, the horizontal asymptote is

A y=0y=0
B x=1x=1
C y=2y=2
D y=1y=1

If a curve has an asymptote y=mx+cy=mx+c, then f(x)−(mx+c)→0f(x)−(mx+c)→0 as

A x→0x→0
B x→ax→a only
C x→±∞x→±∞
D x→1x→1 only

A classification idea for double points in algebraic curves often relies on analyzing the

A Lowest-degree terms
B Highest-degree terms
C Constant terms only
D Trig terms only

For a polar curve, the tangent at the pole is found by first locating angles where

A r→∞r→∞
B r=1r=1
C θ=0θ=0
D r=0r=0

The arc length element in polar form indicates that rapid change in rr with θθ increases length because

A r2r2 disappears
B (dr/dθ)2(dr/dθ)2 adds
C rr becomes negative
D θθ cancels out

For f(x)=x2−4x−2f(x)=x−2×2−4 (with x≠2x=2), the graph is

A Two-branch hyperbola
B Vertical asymptote
C Line with hole
D Parabola only

If a function is shifted upward by kk, its curvature at corresponding xx values

A Becomes zero
B Doubles always
C Changes sign
D Stays same

If a function is shifted right by hh, the x-locations of its inflexion points

A Shift right by hh
B Stay unchanged
C Shift left by hh
D Disappear always

In curve tracing, a safe order that reduces mistakes is first domain, then symmetry, then

A final sketch only
B curvature only
C envelope only
D intercepts and limits

The statement “curve lies below its tangents” corresponds to

A Concave up
B Concave down
C Linear function
D Vertical asymptote

For r=asec⁡θr=asecθ, the curve is a line because

A rcos⁡θ=arcosθ=a
B rsin⁡θ=arsinθ=a
C r2=ar2=a
D θ=aθ=a

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