View Full Version : easy chain rule for you guys
physicsed
Mar24-08, 01:06 AM
y=2x^{sinx}
i know i should use the product rule within a chain rule. but how can i use chain rule with sinx
is the anwser
y=-2x^{cosx}
can anyone give me pointer to this easy problem and tell if am forgetting something.
physicsed
Mar24-08, 01:17 AM
or maybe the answer is
y=-2cosx
That definitely is not the answer. You need to realize what you're doing when you apply the chain rule. First of all, you are attemping to find \frac{dy}{dx}, which you have not indicated. Show your work and maybe we can help, but you first have to transform the equation into something you can work with (i.e. get rid of the exponent). How would you accomplish this?
Edit: Is your equation y=2xsin(x) or y=2x^{sinx}?
physicsed
Mar24-08, 01:34 AM
\frac{dy}{dx} {y= 2x^{sinx}}
product rule
f= 2 f'= 0
g= x g'=?
chain rule
f= x f'= 1
g=? g'=?
is the anser
y'=-2x^{cosx}
Schrodinger's Dog
Mar24-08, 02:53 AM
You're making the assumption that:
\frac{d}{dx}\;2x^{sin(x)}=-2x^{cos(x)}\rightarrow (f \circ g)' = f'\circ g\cdot g'=-2x^{cos(x)}
It doesn't.
You're using the chain rule but incorrectly, use the product rule on the results.
To evaluate this derivative I would take logarithms of both sides to get ln(y)=sinx.ln(2x) and then differentiate implicitly.
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