y = xlogx. Differentiating that gives y' = log x + 1. Equating that to 0 gives logx + 1 = 0, logx = -1. Using the rule:
y = logax
x = a ^ y
gives: x = e ^ -1 = 1 / e.
y'' = 1/x = pos. Therefore min point. So a min.point exists at 1/e.
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I read it again, I did it again, same result. They're saying,
show the minimum point of y = xlogx = -1/e.
y' = logx + 1
= log(-1/e) + 1
= math error.
It isn't a real solution, therefore it can't be a min.
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Edit: for question four, just divide all by x^2.
That should allow you to do it pretty comfortably.