Suppose f is continuously differentiable on [0,1] and f'' (greater than or equal to) 0 on [0,1]. Prove that f(x) (greater than or equal to) f(c) + f'(c)(x-c) for every x,c in [0,1].
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Expert's answer
2011-05-12T12:03:26-0400
By Taylor theorem in integral from
<img src="/cgi-bin/mimetex.cgi?f%28c%29=f%28x%29+f%27%28c%29%28x-c%29+%5Cint_c%5Ex%20%5Cfrac%7Bf%27%27%28t%29%7D%7B2%7D%28t-c%29%5E2dt" title="f(c)=f(x)+f'(c)(x-c)+\int_c^x \frac{f''(t)}{2}(t-c)^2dt"> Since <img src="https://latex.codecogs.com/gif.latex?f%27%27%28x%29%20%5Cge%200" title="f''(x) \ge 0"> on the whole interval [0,1], it follows that the integral lt;img src="https://latex.codecogs.com/gif.latex?%5Cint_c%5Ex%20%5Cfrac%7Bf%27%27%28t%29%7D%7B2%7D%28t-c%29%5E2dt%20%5Cge%200" title="\int_c^x \frac{f''(t)}{2}(t-c)^2dt \ge 0"> , hence <img src="https://latex.codecogs.com/gif.latex?f%28c%29=f%28x%29+f%27%28c%29%28x-c%29%20%5Cge%200" title="f(c)=f(x)+f'(c)(x-c) \ge 0">
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