[Math] How to find critical points when you get constant value

calculusderivatives

To find these critical points you must first take the derivative of the function. Second, set that derivative equal to 0 and solve for x. Each x value you find is known as a critical number.

But what happens if you take derivative and you get a constant value like -1?

Best Answer

The definition of the derivative of a function is the rate of change of a function, say $f(x)$. It defines the gradient of the tangent at a specific point $x$. For a parabola, we visualise that the gradient is always changing, so the derivative of a parabola would be $f'(x) = ax+b$.

If the derivative of a function is a constant value, say, $2$, then this implies that the function's rate of change is $2$ through the whole function, for $x \in \mathbb R$. The only graph where this occurs is a linear graph, which is in the form $f(x) = ax+b$. This also happens to be the derivative of a parabola. Obviously, a line that extends infinitely in either direction does not have a critical point.