Is dx/dy equal to 1/(dy/dx) in Math Equations?

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I was logged out when trying to post and lost everything :cry:


Without the background of the question cause I've lost all the equations and everything, i just needed to know if dx/dy = 1/(dy/dx)
 
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Yes for the most part. There are some basic stipulations I believe, but I'll let the mathematicians point that out.
 
Sure, it's true.
 
The problem:
Youre given
jF9e7.png


Then it says:
kXRtI.png

Ilc6t.png

WluMz.png
My solution:
O7Xhe.png

First type:
n5gfO.png

Second type:
PAVfb.png

It seems to easy to be right.. Though it's part of a worded problem so I could be missing something
 
Last edited:
madcap_ said:
The problem:
Youre given
jF9e7.png


Then it says:
kXRtI.png

Ilc6t.png

WluMz.png



My solution:
O7Xhe.png

First type:
n5gfO.png

Second type:
PAVfb.png




It seems to easy to be right.. Though it's part of a worded problem so I could be missing something

That basically looks ok to me. Is replacing alpha with c in the second part just a typo?
 
Yeah, well I used wolfram to input my answers so it's readable and didn't have that symbol handy. It's the symbol for proportion right?
 
madcap_ said:
Yeah, well I used wolfram to input my answers so it's readable and didn't have that symbol handy. It's the symbol for proportion right?

From what you said in defining dV/dt, it doesn't look like they mean it's 'proportional to'. They are just saying dV/dt is equal to -alpha*(h+R) where alpha is a constant. Not the 'proportional to' symbol. You could simplify (h+R)/(R^2-h^2) a bit.
 
Thank you for clearing that up Dick.
 
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