Solving Derivative of ln[cos(w-1)]: Need Help!

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To find the derivative of f(w) = ln[cos(w-1)], the chain rule must be applied. The derivative of the logarithmic function is 1/cos(w-1), and the derivative of cos(w-1) is -sin(w-1). Therefore, the overall derivative becomes -sin(w-1)/cos(w-1), which simplifies to -tan(w-1). The confusion arises from not correctly applying the chain rule and simplifying the terms. Understanding these steps will lead to the correct answer of -tan(w-1).
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I am presenting a problem in front of the class tomorrow and I am slightly confused on the steps for my problem. The problem is:

Find the derivative of the given function

f(w) = ln[cos(w-1)]

The answer in the back of my book shows the derivative is -tan(w-1) - but I'm my steps aren't giving that answer - could anyone show me the steps to use in order to get that answer? Thanks a lot!
 
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dec1ble said:
I am presenting a problem in front of the class tomorrow and I am slightly confused on the steps for my problem. The problem is:

Find the derivative of the given function

f(w) = ln[cos(w-1)]

The answer in the back of my book shows the derivative is -tan(w-1) - but I'm my steps aren't giving that answer - could anyone show me the steps to use in order to get that answer? Thanks a lot!

Break it down:

Suppose have a function of x as u(x) and have the expression:

ln[u(x)]

Would you not, using the chain rule, take the derivative of the logarithm which is \frac{1}{u(x)}, then take the derivative of u(x) to get:

\frac{1}{u(x)}u^{'}

Same dif with the cosine of a function right? Derivative is minus the sine of the function times the derivative of the function. In your case, it's nested three times (well w-1 is a function of w in which the derivative is just 1).
 
if i have \frac{d}{dx} \ln u = \frac{1}{u}

then i find d/dx cos(w-1) = -sin(1)

then plug that into the u?

so 1/-sin(1) - then I am stuck
 
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