yonathan
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can u pls help me with this quaestion?
p=Po e^-h/c
p=Po e^-h/c
Welcome to PF yonathan,yonathan said:can u pls help me with this quaestion?
p=Po e^-h/c
Notice that the two derivatives that you have found are not equivalent:yonathan said:the pressure P of the atmosphere at height 'h' above ground level is given by P=Po e^-h/c where Po is the pressure at ground level and c is the constant.determine the rate of change of pressure with height when Po=1.013*10^5 pascals C=6.05*10^4 at 1450 meters.
i used the for differentiation to differentiate it and find the first derivative of P=Po e^-h/c and i got P=C*Po e^-h or P=Po*(-h/c) e^-h/c and i substitute ted the numbers the given and my calculator seems not to find the ans for it. so can u help me find the derivitive of P=Po e^-h/c? pls?
So, which one is it?yonathan said:P=C*Po e^-h or P=Po*(-h/c) e^-h/c
Are you sure about that?yonathan said:the derivative of e^f(x) is (f)e^f(x)
Simply let:yonathan said:but what if it was e^(F/x) that's what i want to find out??
No it isn't, you need to recheck you derivative. Use the chain rule.yonathan said:so the first derivative of Po e^-h/c is dp/dh=Poe^f(h), where f(h)is -h/c, and after this, all i have to do is substitute the numbers given, yeh? and i am sure about the derivative u asked me.
Note that in this case, h is a variable and not constant. The chain rule states that for a composite function y\left(f(x)\right)yonathan said:what is 'f' in ur chain rule cause according to it the derivative is f(h)is -h/c??
Okay, let's take this a term at a time. What is:yonathan said:sorry i still don't follow, can u explain it to me in another way or something? i don't know wat to do with the last answer u gave me. do i substitute my numbers on ur answer and wat is e^f(h), how am i suppose to solve it?
It represents the derivative of P with respect to h, which is not P.yonathan said:it represents the differentiation of P which is P.