Differentiation Help: 2 Questions

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around two differentiation problems involving polynomial expressions and the application of differentiation rules such as the product and quotient rules.

Discussion Character

  • Mixed

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • The original poster attempts to differentiate two functions, one using the product rule and the other using a combination of the quotient and product rules. Participants provide feedback on the correctness of the first attempt and seek clarification on the second.

Discussion Status

Some participants affirm the correctness of the first differentiation attempt. For the second problem, there is a suggestion to simplify the expression before differentiating, and participants discuss whether to apply the power rule or continue with the quotient rule.

Contextual Notes

The original poster expresses uncertainty about their notation and the use of LaTex, which may affect the clarity of their mathematical expressions.

Hollysmoke
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There are two differentiation questions that I am working on and was wondering if I did it right and if I did it wrong, to get some help:

1) y=(2x^2-x)(3x^2+5)^8

let u = (2x^2-x) and let v=(3x^2+5)^8

y'=uv' + u'v

u'=4x-1
v'=48x(3x^2+5)^7

y'=(2x^2-x)(48x)(3x^2+5)^7+(4x-1)(3x^2+5)^8


2) This one was the one I was stuck on. I tried using quotient and product rule:

y=(t^2-6t/t^2+6t)^5

y'=5(t^2-6t/t^2+6t)^4 . 1[(2t-6)(t^2+6t)-(t^2-6)(2t+6)/(t^2+6t)^2

Sorry if it's a bit messy. I still haven't gotten the hang of using LaTex yet >_<
 
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First one is spot on.

Is this what the second one is meant to look like?

y= \left( \frac{t^{2} - 6t}{t^{2} + 6t} \right)^{5}
 
For the 2nd one, yessir!
 
You can simplify it a bit first;

y= \left( \frac{t^{2} - 6t}{t^{2} + 6t} \right)^{5} = \frac{(t-6)^5}{(t+6)^5}
 
so should I just use power rule on the top and bottom? or use both quotient and product rule?
 
I would use the quotient rule on this one.
 
Or write it as
(t-6)^5(t+6)^{-5}
and use the product rule.

You would not, of course, just differentiate numerator and denominator separately!
 

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