Mister Exam

Other calculators

  • How to use it?

  • Graphing y =:
  • x^4-2x^2+8
  • -x^4+2*x^2+8
  • x^3-9*x
  • x^3-9x^2+15x-3
  • Integral of d{x}:
  • e^(x^2)*x
  • Identical expressions

  • e^(x^ two)*x
  • e to the power of (x squared ) multiply by x
  • e to the power of (x to the power of two) multiply by x
  • e(x2)*x
  • ex2*x
  • e^(x²)*x
  • e to the power of (x to the power of 2)*x
  • e^(x^2)x
  • e(x2)x
  • ex2x
  • e^x^2x

Graphing y = e^(x^2)*x

v

The graph:

from to

Intersection points:

does show?

Piecewise:

The solution

You have entered [src]
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f(x) = E    *x
$$f{\left(x \right)} = e^{x^{2}} x$$
f = E^(x^2)*x
The graph of the function
The points of intersection with the X-axis coordinate
Graph of the function intersects the axis X at f = 0
so we need to solve the equation:
$$e^{x^{2}} x = 0$$
Solve this equation
The points of intersection with the axis X:

Analytical solution
$$x_{1} = 0$$
Numerical solution
$$x_{1} = 0$$
The points of intersection with the Y axis coordinate
The graph crosses Y axis when x equals 0:
substitute x = 0 to E^(x^2)*x.
$$0 e^{0^{2}}$$
The result:
$$f{\left(0 \right)} = 0$$
The point:
(0, 0)
Extrema of the function
In order to find the extrema, we need to solve the equation
$$\frac{d}{d x} f{\left(x \right)} = 0$$
(the derivative equals zero),
and the roots of this equation are the extrema of this function:
$$\frac{d}{d x} f{\left(x \right)} = $$
the first derivative
$$e^{x^{2}} + 2 x^{2} e^{x^{2}} = 0$$
Solve this equation
Solutions are not found,
function may have no extrema
Inflection points
Let's find the inflection points, we'll need to solve the equation for this
$$\frac{d^{2}}{d x^{2}} f{\left(x \right)} = 0$$
(the second derivative equals zero),
the roots of this equation will be the inflection points for the specified function graph:
$$\frac{d^{2}}{d x^{2}} f{\left(x \right)} = $$
the second derivative
$$2 x \left(2 x^{2} + 3\right) e^{x^{2}} = 0$$
Solve this equation
The roots of this equation
$$x_{1} = 0$$

Сonvexity and concavity intervals:
Let’s find the intervals where the function is convex or concave, for this look at the behaviour of the function at the inflection points:
Concave at the intervals
$$\left[0, \infty\right)$$
Convex at the intervals
$$\left(-\infty, 0\right]$$
Horizontal asymptotes
Let’s find horizontal asymptotes with help of the limits of this function at x->+oo and x->-oo
$$\lim_{x \to -\infty}\left(e^{x^{2}} x\right) = -\infty$$
Let's take the limit
so,
horizontal asymptote on the left doesn’t exist
$$\lim_{x \to \infty}\left(e^{x^{2}} x\right) = \infty$$
Let's take the limit
so,
horizontal asymptote on the right doesn’t exist
Inclined asymptotes
Inclined asymptote can be found by calculating the limit of E^(x^2)*x, divided by x at x->+oo and x ->-oo
$$\lim_{x \to -\infty} e^{x^{2}} = \infty$$
Let's take the limit
so,
inclined asymptote on the left doesn’t exist
$$\lim_{x \to \infty} e^{x^{2}} = \infty$$
Let's take the limit
so,
inclined asymptote on the right doesn’t exist
Even and odd functions
Let's check, whether the function even or odd by using relations f = f(-x) и f = -f(-x).
So, check:
$$e^{x^{2}} x = - x e^{x^{2}}$$
- No
$$e^{x^{2}} x = x e^{x^{2}}$$
- No
so, the function
not is
neither even, nor odd