To determine the behavior of the function \(f(x)=-3x^2\), we consider its derivative to analyze intervals of increase and decrease.
The derivative is:
\(f'(x)=-6x\).
1. Set the derivative equal to zero to find critical points:
\(-6x=0\) ⟹ \(x=0\).
2. Analyze the sign of \(f'(x)\) on the intervals divided by this critical point:
- For \(x<0\), \(f'(x)=-6x>0\). Thus, \(f(x)\) is increasing.
- For \(x>0\), \(f'(x)=-6x<0\). Thus, \(f(x)\) is decreasing.
3. Conclusion:
\(f(x)\) is increasing in \((-∞,0)\) and decreasing in \([0,∞)\).