- Jun 26, 2006
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Here's the question:
"The position of a particle moving along a line is given by s(t) = 2t^3 - 24t^2 + 90t + 7 for t >= 0. For what values of t is the speed of the particle increasing?"
The second derivative of a position function is the acceleration, right? So when the second derivative is positive (positive acceleration) that is where the speed of the particle would be increasing.
s'(t) = 6t^2 - 48t + 90
s''(t) = 12t - 48
From that I get that for anything over t=4 the acceleration is positive thus the speed is increasing... but the correct answer should be 3 < t < 4 && t > 5 according to the answer key.
What am I doing wrong?
Any help would be appreciated 
"The position of a particle moving along a line is given by s(t) = 2t^3 - 24t^2 + 90t + 7 for t >= 0. For what values of t is the speed of the particle increasing?"
The second derivative of a position function is the acceleration, right? So when the second derivative is positive (positive acceleration) that is where the speed of the particle would be increasing.
s'(t) = 6t^2 - 48t + 90
s''(t) = 12t - 48
From that I get that for anything over t=4 the acceleration is positive thus the speed is increasing... but the correct answer should be 3 < t < 4 && t > 5 according to the answer key.
What am I doing wrong?