Need Help Understanding an Equality

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around understanding the transition from an expression involving a limit to the concept of a partial derivative, particularly in the context of functions with multiple variables. The original poster is grappling with the implications of taking limits and how they relate to derivatives in a multivariable setting.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Mathematical reasoning, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants explore the definition of partial derivatives and the conditions under which limits yield meaningful results. There is a focus on the behavior of expressions that lead to indeterminate forms like 0/0 and how to handle them in the context of multivariable calculus.

Discussion Status

The conversation is active, with participants sharing insights about limits and derivatives. Some participants provide examples to illustrate their points, while others seek clarification on specific aspects of the definitions and their applications. There is a recognition of the importance of algebraic manipulation in resolving indeterminate forms.

Contextual Notes

Participants are discussing the implications of using limits in the context of functions with multiple variables, specifically questioning how to differentiate with respect to one variable while holding others constant. There is an underlying assumption that participants have some familiarity with calculus concepts, though the depth of understanding varies.

Meadman23
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I'm mostly trying to understand how the expression in brackets becomes a partial derivative.

I know I end up with 0/0 if I replace all deltaz with 0, so that leads me to believe l'hospital's rule is used here. I just don't see how I could take L hopitals when I have two variables..
 

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Take the limit as Δz→0 and the LHS becomes the definition for the partial derivative.
 
Last edited:
? But wouldn't that give me 0/0 if I take the limit directly?
 
How? Where?

I have to go ... so, notice:
##\Delta z## only appears on the LHS, so the limit dos not affect the RHS at all.
It appears inside the function ##v(z,t)## in the numerator.
How is this different from a regular derivative with only one variable?
 
delta z is in the numerator and in the denominator on the LHS. I'm not sure what you're trying to say.
 
Ahhh... I think I get where you are coming from.

The fact that delta-z appears inside a function in the numerator makes all the difference.
remember, the limit is what happens as delta-z gets very close to zero ... not what happens when delta-z actually is equal to zero. delta-z never reaches zero.

I'm guessing you've not used this sort of expression before:
$$\frac{d}{dx}f(x)=\lim_{h\rightarrow 0}\frac{f(x+h)-f(x)}{h}$$

You could imagine that in the limit, f(x+h)=f(x), which makes the expression evaluate to 0/0.
But that does not work for all possible f(x) - I only need one counter-example to show it's not always true, watch:

example: f(x)=x
$$\lim_{h\rightarrow 0}\frac{f(x+h)-f(x)}{h}= \lim_{h\rightarrow 0}\left [ \frac{(x+h)-x}{h}\right]=\lim_{h\rightarrow 0}\left[ \frac{h}{h}\right]=\lim_{h\rightarrow 0}[1]=1$$ ... see? Since all the h's cancel out, the limit evaluates into something sensible.

The trick is to do the algebra with the aim of getting the h out of the denominator. Otherwise that could be a problem.

example f(x)=x^2 ... try it.

Now back to your example - put v(z,t)=z/t in the LHS, and take the limit delta-z approaches zero.
 
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Surely, if you are looking at problems like this, you have taken Calculus? The definition of the "derivative of f(x) at x= a" is
\lim_{h\to 0}\frac{f(a+ h)- f(a)}{h}

Obviously, if you simple "set h equal to 0" you will get the meaningless "0/0". That's the whole point of using the "limit". Taking the limit "as h goes to 0" is NOT the same as setting h= 0. You should have learned that in introductory Calculus.
 
Simon Bridge said:
Ahhh... I think I get where you are coming from.

The fact that delta-z appears inside a function in the numerator makes all the difference.
remember, the limit is what happens as delta-z gets very close to zero ... not what happens when delta-z actually is equal to zero. delta-z never reaches zero.

I'm guessing you've not used this sort of expression before:
$$\frac{d}{dx}f(x)=\lim_{h\rightarrow 0}\frac{f(x+h)-f(x)}{h}$$

You could imagine that in the limit, f(x+h)=f(x), which makes the expression evaluate to 0/0.
But that does not work for all possible f(x) - I only need one counter-example to show it's not always true, watch:

example: f(x)=x
$$\lim_{h\rightarrow 0}\frac{f(x+h)-f(x)}{h}= \lim_{h\rightarrow 0}\left [ \frac{(x+h)-x}{h}\right]=\lim_{h\rightarrow 0}\left[ \frac{h}{h}\right]=\lim_{h\rightarrow 0}[1]=1$$ ... see? Since all the h's cancel out, the limit evaluates into something sensible.

The trick is to do the algebra with the aim of getting the h out of the denominator. Otherwise that could be a problem.

example f(x)=x^2 ... try it.

Now back to your example - put v(z,t)=z/t in the LHS, and take the limit delta-z approaches zero.

I end up with

{ [ (z/t) + Δz] - (z/t) } / Δz

then

Δz / Δz

then

1then taking the limit I get

1Or am I supposed to do

{[(z + Δz)/t] - (z/t)} / Δz[(z/t) + (Δz/t) -(z/t)] / Δz(Δz/t) / Δz1/t
How does this get me to the partial derivative with respect to z and how would I know that doing all this wouldn't give me a partial with respect to t instead?Also, was (z/t) arbitrary? Or would something like (zt) have worked?
 
You use the normal rules for substitution:

If ##v(z,t)=z/t##, then ##v(z+Δz,t) = (z+Δz)/t##

i.e every time you see a z, you replace it with z+Δz

So you have the LHS limit = 1/t - compare that with the partial derivative.
(Do you know how to take a partial derivative?)

How does this get me to the partial derivative of with respect to z and how would I know that doing all this wouldn't give me a partial with respect to t instead?
The partial derivative of ##v(z,t)## with respect to ##t## would be:
$$\frac{\partial}{\partial t}v(z,t)=\lim_{\Delta t\rightarrow 0}\frac{v(z,t+\Delta t)-v(z,t)}{\Delta t}$$

In general,
If you have a function ##f(\vec{x})## of ##N## variables ##\vec{x}=(x_1,x_2,\cdots ,x_N)##
Then the partial derivative wrt the nth variable, where ##1\leq n \leq N##, is:
$$\frac{\partial}{\partial x_n}f(\vec{x})=\lim_{\Delta x_n\rightarrow 0}\frac{f(\cdots, x_n+\Delta x_n,\cdots)-f(\cdots,x_n,\cdots)}{\Delta x_n}$$
... note: if you don't understand that notation you have a serious problem!

Also, was (z/t) arbitrary? Or would something like (zt) have worked?
Do it and see :)

The definition works for any differentiable function. It would have worked for ##v(z,t)=z## or ##v(z,t)=t## ... whatever.

Do you know how to differentiate functions by rule instead of using the definition?
i.e. can you do: $$\frac{d}{dx}(ax^2+bx+e^{cx})$$
 

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