Murdoc88
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Homework Statement
The side of a cube increases at 1 cm / s. How fast is the diagonal of the cube changing when the side is 1 cm?
Homework Equations
Involves:
a^2+b^2=c^2
Implicit Differentiation
Derivation
The Attempt at a Solution
I'm attempting to find the diagonal of the cube through Pythagorean Theory where I find the diagonal of one side of the cube to give me an equation for side length 'A', after finding side length 'A' I know that the height of the cube is 'x' centimeters so I can then again use Pythagorean Theory to find the equation of the diagonal going through the cube.So I set all sides of the cube equal to 'x' and solve for a diagonal of one of the sides of the cube in order to get a side length ( 'A' ) of the diagonal within the cube. Using Pythagorean I come to the equation of:
x^2+x^2=C^2
2x^2=C^2
\sqrt2x^2 = C
After that I know that the height of the cube is 'x' so once again using Pythagorean I can derive an equation for the diagonal through the cube.
(\sqrt2x^2)^2 + x^2 = D^2
3x^2 = D^2
\sqrt3x^2 = d
Now this is where I become confused in order to find the rate of change at 1 cm. Do I then find the derivative of \sqrt3x^2 = D through implicit differentiation?
I.E:
D = \sqrt3x^2
D' = (3x)/\sqrt3x^2 (dLength/dt)
... I'm rather lost on what to do from here. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
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