Determine the second derivative of a function

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SUMMARY

The discussion focuses on determining the second derivative of the function g(x) = f(x + 2 cos(3x)), where f is a twice-differentiable function. The correct application of the chain rule is essential for solving both parts of the problem. For part (a), the second derivative is given by g''(x) = f''(h(x))[h'(x)]^2 + f'(h(x))h''(x). For part (b), the correct computation of g''(0) results in -10, after correctly substituting the values of f'(2) and f''(2).

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kent davidge
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Homework Statement



Let ##f: \mathbb{R} \rightarrow \mathbb{R}## a function two times differentiable and ##g: \mathbb{R} \rightarrow \mathbb{R}## given by ##g(x) = f(x + 2 \cos(3x))##.

(a) Determine g''(x).

(b) If f'(2) = 1 and f''(2) = 8, compute g''(0).

Homework Equations



I'm not aware of any.

The Attempt at a Solution


[/B]
I was thinking about a Taylor expansion of ##f## around ##x##. Is it allowed? Anyway, it was getting very complicated because of the derivatives getting higher and higher (and we have information that ##f## is two times differentiable, no guarantee that it's more than that).

So
for (a) I simply answered that g''(x) = f''(x + 2 cos(3x)). I'm not sure that's enough.
for (b) I noticed that g(0) = f(2) and I asserted that g''(0) = f''(2) = 8. But I do not think that's right because the problem even give f'(2). It would not do it without a reason.

 
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kent davidge said:

Homework Statement



Let ##f: \mathbb{R} \rightarrow \mathbb{R}## a function two times differentiable and ##g: \mathbb{R} \rightarrow \mathbb{R}## given by ##g(x) = f(x + 2 \cos(3x))##.

(a) Determine g''(x).

(b) If f'(2) = 1 and f''(2) = 8, compute g''(0).

Homework Equations



I'm not aware of any.

The Attempt at a Solution


[/B]
I was thinking about a Taylor expansion of ##f## around ##x##. Is it allowed? Anyway, it was getting very complicated because of the derivatives getting higher and higher (and we have information that ##f## is two times differentiable, no guarantee that it's more than that).

So
for (a) I simply answered that g''(x) = f''(x + 2 cos(3x)). I'm not sure that's enough.
for (b) I noticed that g(0) = f(2) and I asserted that g''(0) = f''(2) = 8. But I do not think that's right because the problem even give f'(2). It would not do it without a reason.
You need to use the chain rule.
 
tnich said:
You need to use the chain rule
Should I use it for question (a) or (b)?
 
kent davidge said:
Should I use it for question (a) or (b)?
You should use if for a), and then substitute values for x and the derivatives of f for b).
 
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Thread moved.
@kent davidge, please post questions about derivatives (and integrals) in the Calculus & Beyond section, not in the Precalc section.
 
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consider that one way of thinking about derivatives with the chain rule is that you have a function INSIDE another function. so start with the idea that a chain rule assumes you have a function of the form f(g(x)). what does the derivative look like, according to chain rule?
 
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Thanks for the answers. Using the chain rule I get:

(a) ##g''(x) = f''(h(x))[h'(x)]^2 + f'(h(x))h''(x)##

(b) ##g''(0) = f''(h(0))[h'(0)]^2 + f'(h(0))h''(0) = 1 \times f''(2) - 18 \times f'(2) = -143.##

Correct?
 
kent davidge said:
Thanks for the answers. Using the chain rule I get:

(a) ##g''(x) = f''(h(x))[h'(x)]^2 + f'(h(x))h''(x)##

That's good. Although they probably expect a specific answer using the given ##h(x)##

kent davidge said:
(b) ##g''(0) = f''(h(0))[h'(0)]^2 + f'(h(0))h''(0) = 1 \times f''(2) - 18 \times f'(2) = -143.##

Correct?

Not so good.
 
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PeroK said:
Not so good.
It used the wrong values, is it? The correct result is ##-10##.
 
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  • #10
kent davidge said:
It used the wrong values, is it? The correct result is ##-10##.
You used the right values, they were just in the wrong places.
 
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