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Question: Let f and g be increasing and decreasing functions respectively from \(\left( 0,\infty \right)\) to ...

Let f and g be increasing and decreasing functions respectively from (0,)\left( 0,\infty \right) to (0,)\left( 0,\infty \right) and let h(x) = f[g(x)]. If h(0)= 0, then h(x) – h(1) is
[a] always zero
[b] always negative
[c] always positive
[d] strictly increasing
[e] None of these.

Explanation

Solution

Hint: Use the fact that if f(x) is an increasing function then for all x1>x2{{x}_{1}}>{{x}_{2}}, we have f(x1)f(x2)f\left( {{x}_{1}} \right)\ge f\left( {{x}_{2}} \right). Similarly, if f(x)f\left( x \right) is a decreasing function, then for all x1>x2{{x}_{1}}>{{x}_{2}}, we have f(x1)f(x2)f\left( {{x}_{1}} \right)\le f\left( {{x}_{2}} \right). Hence choose x1,x2(0,){{x}_{1}},{{x}_{2}}\in \left( 0,\infty \right) and check whether h(x1)1(h(x2)1)0h\left( {{x}_{1}} \right)-1-\left( h\left( {{x}_{2}} \right)-1 \right)\ge 0 or 0\le 0 and hence determine the nature of h(x)h(1)h\left( x \right)-h\left( 1 \right).

Complete step-by-step answer:
We know that if f(x)f\left( x \right) is increasing in the interval II, then for all x1,x2I{{x}_{1}},{{x}_{2}}\in I, we have x1>x2f(x1)f(x2){{x}_{1}}>{{x}_{2}}\Rightarrow f\left( {{x}_{1}} \right)\ge f\left( {{x}_{2}} \right) and if f(x) is decreasing in the interval II, then for all x1,x2I{{x}_{1}},{{x}_{2}}\in I, we have x1>x2f(x1)f(x2){{x}_{1}}>{{x}_{2}}\Rightarrow f\left( {{x}_{1}} \right)\le f\left( {{x}_{2}} \right)
Now consider x1,x2(0,){{x}_{1}},{{x}_{2}}\in \left( 0,\infty \right), we have since g(x) is a decreasing function
g(x1)g(x2)g\left( {{x}_{1}} \right)\le g\left( {{x}_{2}} \right)
Now since g(x1),g(x2)(0,)g\left( {{x}_{1}} \right),g\left( {{x}_{2}} \right)\in \left( 0,\infty \right) because codomain of g(x) is (0,)\left( 0,\infty \right) and since f(x) is increasing in (0,)\left( 0,\infty \right), we have
f(g(x1))f(g(x2))f\left( g\left( {{x}_{1}} \right) \right)\le f\left( g\left( {{x}_{2}} \right) \right)
Hence we have h(x1)h(x2)h\left( {{x}_{1}} \right)\le h\left( {{x}_{2}} \right)
Hence h(x) is a decreasing function.
Since in the interval (0,)\left( 0,\infty \right), there exist x1<1{{x}_{1}}<1 and x2>1{{x}_{2}}>1, we have h(x1)h(1)0h\left( {{x}_{1}} \right)-h\left( 1 \right)\ge 0 and h(x2)10h\left( {{x}_{2}} \right)-1\le 0
Hence h(x) – h(1) is both positive as well as negative in the interval (0,)\left( 0,\infty \right)
Hence none of the options is correct.

Note: Do not try proving that h(x) is a decreasing function by differentiating both sides and showing h’(x) is non-positive. This method is incorrect as it justifies h(x) being decreasing only if f(x) and g(x) are differentiable and not in general.