AoPSWiki
Try our innovative online adaptive learning system, Alcumus.
Over 1100 problems and 60+ video lessons. FREE!
Personal tools

Tangent (geometry)

From AoPSWiki

A tangent line is a linear approximate to a curve. That is, if you zoom in very closely, the tangent line and the curve will become indistinguishable from each other at the point in which they intersect.

Intersection

Locally, a tangent line intersects a curve in a single point. However, if a curve is neither convex nor concave, it is possible for a tangent line to intersect a curve in additional points. For instance, the tangent line of the curve y = \sin x at (0, 0) intersects it in 1 point, while the tangent line at \left(\frac{\pi}4, \frac{1}{\sqrt 2}\right) intersects it in 2 points and the tangent line at \left(\frac{\pi}2, 1\right) intersects it in infinitely many points (and is in fact the tangent line at each point of intersection).

At a given point, a curve may have either 0 or 1 tangent lines. For the graph of a function, the condition "having a tangent line at a point" is equivalent to "being a differentiable function at that point." It is a fairly strong condition on a function -- only continuous functions may have tangent lines, and there are many continuous functions which fail to have tangent lines either at some points (for instance, the absolute value function y = |x| at x = 0) or even at all points!

This article is a stub. Help us out by expanding it.

See also

Want to learn how to tackle those tough AMC/AIME/Olympiad algebra problems? Check out Art of Problem Solving's Intermediate Algebra by Richard Rusczyk and Mathew Crawford. Over 1600 problems!
© Copyright 2008 AoPS Incorporated. All Rights Reserved. • FoundationPrivacyContact Us