Examples of using Second derivative in English and their translations into Thai
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
But if the derivative is equal to 0, the second derivative is equal to 0, you cannot assume that is an inflection point.
We have second derivative of y, plus 4 times the first derivative, plus 4y is equal to 0.
That satisfies-- when you take the second derivative minus 3 times the first minus 4 times the function, I actually get 2 sin of x.
So the second derivative-- actually, if we were to just evaluate that-- it would be 2a.
I will rewrite it. f prime prime of x, second derivative, 12x times 3x minus 2.
Now the third term makes sure that the second derivative of our polynomial at x equals 1 is equal to the second derivative of the polynomial of the function.
And this, of course, is just going to be equal to the derivative of x of- the derivative of x- the second derivative of x(t) is just the derivative of the first derivative. .
So, we get 4i plus… and then the derivative- the second derivative, or the second derivative of y with respect to t is just the derivative of the first derivative. .
Now if this equation were-- if I rewrote it as x squared d, the second derivative of y with respect to x squared, is equal to sine of x, and let's say I were to square this.
And the next term is going to be zero, we see that over there because the second derivative of our function evaluated at zero is zero our third derivative of our function evaluated at zero is 1 so that term's going to show up again.
first derivative at xis equal to zero as f of x, it has the same second derivative.
Well, we could just keep doing this, and actually, we will keep doing this, and you know, just saying, well, the zeroth derivative, or at the value, is the same the first derivative is the same at 0, the second derivative is the same at 0, we will say the third derivative, the fourth derivative, and we will keep doing that.
So the second derivative, if x is less than 2/3, the second derivative, right to the left, right when you go less than 2/3, the seconds derivative of x is less than 0.
That was our second derivative.
What is the second derivative?
What's the second derivative?
So what's the second derivative?
And what's the second derivative?
And what would be a second derivative?
Well a second derivative would be 2Ax plus B.