A tangent plane to a surface does not always exist at every point on the surface. Consider the function
The graph of this function follows.
If either
or
then
so the value of the function does not change on either the
x - or
y -axis. Therefore,
so as either
approach zero, these partial derivatives stay equal to zero. Substituting them into
[link] gives
as the equation of the tangent line. However, if we approach the origin from a different direction, we get a different story. For example, suppose we approach the origin along the line
If we put
into the original function, it becomes
When
the slope of this curve is equal to
when
the slope of this curve is equal to
This presents a problem. In the definition of
tangent plane , we presumed that all tangent lines through point
(in this case, the origin) lay in the same plane. This is clearly not the case here. When we study differentiable functions, we will see that this function is not differentiable at the origin.
The diagram for the linear approximation of a function of one variable appears in the following graph.
The tangent line can be used as an approximation to the function
for values of
reasonably close to
When working with a function of two variables, the tangent line is replaced by a tangent plane, but the approximation idea is much the same.