Find the critical points of f(x,y)=x^(2)ye^(−x−y). x=0 and x=2 both satisfy f_x=0,f_y=0, and when x=2,y=1. But when x=0,y is arbritary. So how can I determine whether the critical point at 0 is max/min/saddle?

Lisantiom

Lisantiom

Answered question

2022-10-03

Find the critical points of
f ( x , y ) = x 2 y e x y .
x = 0 and x = 2 both satisfy f x = 0 , f y = 0, and when x = 2 , y = 1. But when x = 0 , y, x = 0 , y is arbritary. So how can I determine whether the critical point at 0 is max/min/saddle?

Answer & Explanation

Kelly Ibarra

Kelly Ibarra

Beginner2022-10-04Added 6 answers

The set of critical points is { ( 0 , y ) :   y R } { ( 2 , 1 ) }. The Hessian of f is
H f ( x , y ) = [ y e x y ( x 2 4 x + 2 ) x ( 2 x ) e x y ( 1 y ) x ( 2 x ) e x y ( 1 y ) x 2 e x y ( y 2 ) ]
The critical point ( 2 , 1 ) is clearly a local maximum, since H f ( 2 , 1 ) has deteminant 8 e 6 > 0 and trace 6 e 3 < 0
This is sufficient to deduce that the points { ( 0 , y ) :   y > 0 } are all local minimums, { ( 0 , y ) :   y > 0 } are local maximums, and ( 0 , 0 ) is a saddle.

If you wonder what a curve of critical points graphically means, think of a half pipe placed horizontally on the ground: the set of points that touch the ground is all made of local (global too...) minimums. For a more mathematical example, just consider the shape of the surface f ( x , y ) = x 2 .

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