Derivatives Problem (Calculus I)

PotentialE
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Homework Statement


find d/dt for a rectangle.

Homework Equations


A=bh
product rule for derivatives (the first times the derivative of the second plus the second times the derivative of the first)
Chain rule for derivatives

The Attempt at a Solution


If b is a constant, then I know that dA/dh = b (this was the previous problem in which I could solve)
my issue with the current problem is that this variable t that I'm supposed to take the derivative with respect to is not in the problem- so how would I go about doing this?

My attempt:
d/dt (A=bh)
dA/dt = bh
dA/dt = (b(dA/dh)) + (h(dA/db))
My only problem with this solution is that I think there should be a d(b or h)/dt on the right side of the equation because of the chain rule

could someone please explain where/why the variable t comes in and what the correct answer is? Thank you!
 
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PotentialE said:
find d/dt for a rectangle.

I have no clue what this means. Can you quote the full problem as it appears in your book?
 
that's my problem too... that IS the quote!

"Find d/dt for a rectangle" and then the formula given is A=bh
so find d/dt for A=bh
 
Well, that makes no sense. I advice asking your teacher for more explanations.
 
On a previous problem:
Find d/dt for a square

and the answer was:
d/dt (A=s2)

dA/dt = 2s (ds/dt)

perhaps you understand this one? (I don't)
well i know the derivative of s2 = 2s. so we've taken the derivative of A with respect to t... so perhaps multiplying 2s by ds/dt is part of the chain rule or something... I don't really know where ds/dt came from
 
PotentialE said:

Homework Statement


find d/dt for a rectangle.


Homework Equations


A=bh
product rule for derivatives (the first times the derivative of the second plus the second times the derivative of the first)
Chain rule for derivatives

The Attempt at a Solution


If b is a constant, then I know that dA/dh = b (this was the previous problem in which I could solve)
my issue with the current problem is that this variable t that I'm supposed to take the derivative with respect to is not in the problem- so how would I go about doing this?

My attempt:
d/dt (A=bh)
dA/dt = bh
dA/dt = (b(dA/dh)) + (h(dA/db))
My only problem with this solution is that I think there should be a d(b or h)/dt on the right side of the equation because of the chain rule

could someone please explain where/why the variable t comes in and what the correct answer is? Thank you!
Assume that b and h are both functions of time.

There should be no derivatives of A on the right hand side of the following:

dA/dt = (b(dA/dh)) + (h(dA/db))

Use the product rule to find \displaystyle \frac{d}{dt}(b\,h)\ .[/itex
 
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