Find the intervals on which the graph of \( f \) is cuncave upwarl \( f(x)=\ln \left(x^{2}-2 x+10\right) \) For what interval(s) of \( x \) is the graph of \( f \) concave upward? A. B. The graph is never concevve upword. For what interval(s) of \( x \) is the grapli of I concave downwars A. \( \square \) (Type your answer in interval notation. Type an exa B. The graph is never concave cownward.
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To find the intervals where the graph of \( f(x) = \ln(x^{2} - 2x + 10) \) is concave upward, we first need to compute the second derivative of the function and determine where it is positive. First, we find the first derivative: \[ f'(x) = \frac{2x - 2}{x^2 - 2x + 10} \] Next, to find the second derivative, we apply the quotient rule again: \[ f''(x) = \frac{(2)(x^2 - 2x + 10) - (2x - 2)(2x - 2)}{(x^{2} - 2x + 10)^{2}} \] After simplifying \( f''(x) \), we examine where \( f''(x) > 0 \) for concavity. In conclusion, you will find that \( f(x) \) is concave upward on the entire real line, as the expression for a second derivative simplifies positively across its domain. For the concave downward intervals, it turns out that since \( f''(x) \) doesn't turn negative anywhere, the graph is never concave downward. So, if we have to fill in: A. \( (−∞, ∞) \) B. The graph is never concave downward.