Multi-variable differential question

steejk
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Homework Statement



F = 1/2.a(T-Tc)M^2 + 1/4.bM^4

I need to find dF/dM

a,Tc,b are positive constants

2. The attempt at a solution

I assume this is to do with partial derivatives etc.

So I found:

∂F/∂T = 1/2.aM^2

∂F/∂M = TaM - TcaM + bM^3

And using a chain rule:

dF/dM = ∂F/∂T.dT/dM + ∂F/∂M.dM/dM

But not sure how to find dT/dM
 
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steejk said:

Homework Statement



F = 1/2.a(T-Tc)M^2 + 1/4.bM^4

I need to find dF/dM

Is that supposed to be$$
F=(\frac 1 2)a(T-T_c)M^2 +(\frac 1 4)bM^4$$
a,Tc,b are positive constants

2. The attempt at a solution

I assume this is to do with partial derivatives etc.

So I found:

∂F/∂T = 1/2.aM^2

∂F/∂M = TaM - TcaM + bM^3

And using a chain rule:

dF/dM = ∂F/∂T.dT/dM + ∂F/∂M.dM/dM

But not sure how to find dT/dM

The statement of the problem says find ##\frac{dF}{dM}##. Isn't the expression just a polynomial in ##M##? Hold everything else constant and differentiate it.
 
LCKurtz said:
Is that supposed to be$$
F=(\frac 1 2)a(T-T_c)M^2 +(\frac 1 4)bM^4$$

Yes that's the correct equation.

Isn't T also a variable or have I just forgotten how to do basic differentiation?
 
steejk said:

Homework Statement



F = 1/2.a(T-Tc)M^2 + 1/4.bM^4

I need to find dF/dM

a,Tc,b are positive constants

steejk said:
Yes that's the correct equation.

Isn't T also a variable or have I just forgotten how to do basic differentiation?

You said it was a constant above. And if it weren't, you would still calculate the partial derivative ##\frac{\partial F}{\partial M}## the same way.
 
LCKurtz said:
You said it was a constant above. And if it weren't, you would still calculate the partial derivative ##\frac{\partial F}{\partial M}## the same way.

Sorry, Tc is a constant but not T.

I can see the partial derivative would hold everything else constant, but I need to find the total derivative dF/dM.
 
I guess I misunderstood what you wanted. If T depends on M, then the chain rule in your original post would be correct. But without more information, I don't see you you could calculate ##\frac{dT}{dM}##.
 
There are two things I don't understand about this problem. First, when finding the nth root of a number, there should in theory be n solutions. However, the formula produces n+1 roots. Here is how. The first root is simply ##\left(r\right)^{\left(\frac{1}{n}\right)}##. Then you multiply this first root by n additional expressions given by the formula, as you go through k=0,1,...n-1. So you end up with n+1 roots, which cannot be correct. Let me illustrate what I mean. For this...
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