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- [Voiceover] A secant
line intersects the curve
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y equals the natural log of x
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at two points,
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with x-coordinates two and two plus h.
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What is the slope of the secant line?
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Well, they're giving us
two points on this line.
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It might not be immediately
obvious, but they're giving us
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the points when x is equal to two,
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when x is equal to two, what is y?
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Well y, they tell us, y is
equal to the natural log of x,
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so in this case it is going
to be the natural log of two,
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and when x is equal to
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two plus h,
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what is y?
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Well, y is always going
to be the natural log
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of whatever x is.
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So it's going to be the
natural log of two plus h.
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And so these are two points
that sit on the secant line.
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This happens to be where
the secant line intersects
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our curve, but these are
two points on the line,
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and if you know two points on a line,
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you will then be able to figure
out the slope of that line.
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Now we can just remind ourselves that
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a slope is just change
in y over change in x,
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and so what is this going to be?
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Well if we view the second
one as our endpoint,
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our change in y going from ln
of two to ln of two plus h,
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so our change in y is
going to be our endpoint.
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So, natural log of two plus
h minus our starting point,
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or our end y-value minus
our starting y-value.
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Natural log of two
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and then our change in x,
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our change in x is going
to be our ending x-value,
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two plus h, minus our starting
x-value, minus two, and
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of course these twos cancel
out, and if we look here
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it looks like we have a
choice that directly matches
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what we just wrote.
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This right over here,
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natural log of two plus h
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minus natural log of two over h.
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Now, if you wanna visualize
this a little bit more,
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we could draw a little bit,
I'm gonna clear this out
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so I have space to draw the graph,
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just so you can really visualize
that this is a secant line.
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So let me draw my y-axis,
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and let me draw my x-axis,
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and y equals the natural
log of x is going to look,
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so let me underline that,
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that is going to look something like this.
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I'm obviously hand drawing it,
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so not a great drawing, right over here.
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And so when we have the point
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two comma natural log of two,
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which would be, lets say it's over,
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so if this is two,
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then this right over here is
the natural log of two, so
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that's the points two comma
natural log of two, and then
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we have some other, we just
noted the abstract two plus h,
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so it's two plus something.
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So let's say that is two plus h.
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And so this is going to be the point
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where we sit on the graph.
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That's going to be two plus
h comma the natural log of
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two plus h, and the exercise
we just did is finding
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the slope of the line
that connects these two.
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So the line will look
something like that, and
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and the way that we did
this is we figured out,
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okay what is our change in y?
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So our change in, so let's
see, we are going from
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y equals natural log of two to y equals
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natural log of two plus h.
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So our change in y,
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our change in y is
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our natural log of two plus h
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minus natural log of two.
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Minus natural log of
two, and our change in x?
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Well we're going from two to two plus h,
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we're going from two to two
plus h, so our change in x,
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we just increased by h.
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We're going from two to two plus h,
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so our change in x is equal to h.
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So the slope of the secant line,
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the slope of the secant line,
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a secant that intersects
our graph in two points
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is going to be change
in y over change in x,
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which is once again exactly
what we have over there.