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MathsRevision.net
Pure Section
Trigonometry
Calculus
Algebra
Geometry |
Implicit DifferentiationIf y3 = x, how would you differentiate this with respect to
x? There are three ways: Method 1Rewrite it as y = x(1/3) and differentiate as
normal (in harder cases, this is not possible!) Method 2Find dx/dy: dx = 3y2
So we get: Method 3Differentiate term by term and use the chain
rule:
The left hand side becomes:
(although it is not strictly correct to do so, at this level you can think of
dy/dx as a fraction in the chain rule. In the line above, imagine that you can
cancel the "dy" s, leaving d/dx and y3, which is what we had in the previous
line).
Therefore, 3y2 × dy = 1 ExampleDifferentiate x2 + y2 = 3x, with
respect to x.
ExampleDifferentiate ax with respect to x. You might be tempted to write xax-1 as the answer. This is wrong. That would be the answer if we were differentiating with respect to a not x. Put y = ax . Then, taking logarithms of both sides, we get: ln y = ln (ax) So, differentiating implicitly, we get: (1/y) (dy/dx) = lna Revision Guides; MathsRevision.Net Home © Matthew Pinkney 2007 |