Differentiation with different variables

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around taking the derivative of an integral involving a function V(τ) with respect to a variable V. The context is rooted in calculus, particularly focusing on the fundamental theorem of calculus and concepts from calculus of variations.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants express confusion regarding the interpretation of the derivative with respect to V, questioning its validity and relationship to the fundamental theorem of calculus. Some suggest that if the derivative could be moved inside the integral, it would yield a straightforward result, while others challenge this assumption.

Discussion Status

There is an ongoing exploration of the meaning of the derivative with respect to a function in the context of calculus of variations. Some participants have provided insights into functional derivatives, while others are seeking clarification on the legality of moving derivatives inside integrals. Multiple interpretations are being discussed without a clear consensus.

Contextual Notes

Participants note that the expression involves a calculus of variations problem, which may impose specific constraints on how derivatives are treated. There is also mention of the need for additional information regarding the definitions and theorems related to functional derivatives.

wilsondd
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Homework Statement



I'm trying to take the derivative of the following integral

\frac{d}{d V} \int_0^t{V(\tau)}d\tau

Homework Equations



FTC will probably be a part of it.

The Attempt at a Solution



I always get confused when I'm taking the derivative of an integral. I know the answer is not simply V(t) though since the integrating variable is not the same as the variable I am trying to take the derivative with respect to.
 
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I found the expression \frac{d}{d V} \int_0^t{V(\tau)}d\tau a little surprising. I'm not sure how to interpret the \frac{d}{d V}. I would have expected to see \frac{d}{d t} \int_0^t{V(\tau)}d\tau instead. In that case it is exactly the fundamental theorem of calculus and the solution is ##V(t)##.

Note that I would expect the solution to be a function of ##t## because the expression itself is a function of ##t##. ##τ## is a dummy variable used to compute the definite integral - the expression itself is not a function of ##τ##.
 
hapefish said:
I found the expression \frac{d}{d V} \int_0^t{V(\tau)}d\tau a little surprising. I'm not sure how to interpret the \frac{d}{d V}. I would have expected to see \frac{d}{d t} \int_0^t{V(\tau)}d\tau instead. In that case it is exactly the fundamental theorem of calculus and the solution is ##V(t)##.

Yes, I agree it is weird, but it is part of a calculus of variations problem, and is not a typo or anything.
 
Thinking more about the problem, if it is legal to bring the derivative inside the integral, then the answer would just be t. This seems odd in the context of the larger problem, though.

Can anybody comment on if this is correct or not. Thanks.
 
wilsondd said:
Thinking more about the problem, if it is legal to bring the derivative inside the integral, then the answer would just be t. This seems odd in the context of the larger problem, though.

Can anybody comment on if this is correct or not. Thanks.

That is not legal. The only thing you can move in and out of integrals is contants.
 
You could perhaps start with the chain rule.
 
You may need to provide more information. What does d/dV even mean here? It can't be a derivative, since the thing to the right of it isn't the value at V of some differentiable function. Is it a functional derivative? Does the course you're taking cover the definition of "functional derivative"? Does the book prove a theorem for functional derivatives that is similar to the chain rule?
 
wilsondd said:
Yes, I agree it is weird, but it is part of a calculus of variations problem, and is not a typo or anything.

In Calculus of variations and Optimal Control we talk about "functional derivatives", which are like directional derivatives in function space. So, given a functional
F(f) = \int_a^b L(f(t)) \, dt,
the directional derivative of F(f) in the direction h (also called the Gateaux derivative) is
DF(f;h) \equiv \frac{d}{d\epsilon} \int_a^b F(f(t) + \epsilon h(t)) \, dt\\<br /> = \int_a^b F^{\prime}(f(t))\cdot h(t) \, dt.
In this notation, your functional ##F(V) = \int_0^t V(\tau) \, d\tau## would have directional derivative
DF(V;h) = \int_0^t h(\tau) \, d\tau.

I don't know if that is what you want, but that is what is done in all treatments of Calculus of Variations that I have seen.
 
\frac{d}{dV} is the derivative with respect to the function V(t).

This is a calculus of variations problem, and the functional is

\int_0^{t_1}{\mathcal{M}}dt,

\mathcal{M} = \int_0^t{V(\tau)}d\tau + \text{other stuff...}

What I'm trying to do, is find the equation for


\frac{d\mathcal{M}}{dV} = \frac{d}{dt} \frac{d\mathcal{M}}{d\dot{V}}

which is where the derivative comes from in the first place.

Hope this helps.

Thanks.
 

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