Finding Partial Derivatives with Implicit Differentiation

ktobrien
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Homework Statement


Use implicit differentiation to find ∂z/∂x and ∂z/∂y
yz = ln(x + z)


The Attempt at a Solution


I came up with
(x+2)/(x+2)(1-xy-yz)

Could someone please help me solve this. I know to treat y as a constant and to multiply all the derivatives of z by ∂z/∂x
 
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if y=constant

the left side is just y(∂z/∂x)


so now for ln(x+z) what happens when you differentiate this w.r.t to x ?
 
well I get 1/(x+z)(1+(∂z/∂x)). But this is what I did when I got the incorrect answer.
 
That's fine for the right side if you are doing d/dx. What's the left side? Isn't it (dy/dx)*z+y*(dz/dx)? I don't understand how your answer doesn't contain any derivatives.
 
Because that's what I am trying find. You differentiate z with respect to x.
y(∂z/∂x)=1/(x+z)(1+(∂z/∂x)) is what I got but I don't think its right and if it is I messed something up when I solved for (∂z/∂x)
 
You can't eliminate all of the derivatives from the solution of either dz/dx or dz/dy. Each solution has to contain the partial derivative of z wrt to the other variable.
 
there are two different answers. the answer i got was just for ∂z/∂x. can someone please tell me if I did it right or not.
 
No. You didn't do it right. If you are solving for dz/dx how can you get rid of dy/dx?
 
y is a constant when you solve implicitly for (∂z/∂x)
 
  • #10
ktobrien said:
y is a constant when you solve implicitly for (∂z/∂x)

Of course it is. Sorry. I wasn't thinking. y(∂z/∂x)=(1/(x+z))*(1+(∂z/∂x)) is fine for a start. Now what do you get when you solve for ∂z/∂x?
 
  • #11
I figured it out. Thanks though. I got the wrong answer because I did the algebra wrong. I just assumed I did the calculus wrong. Thanks again.
 
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