What is the derivative of kinetic energy?

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SUMMARY

The derivative of kinetic energy, represented by the equation E(v) = \tfrac{1}{2} mv^2, is E'(v) = mv. This indicates that the derivative, which represents the slope of the tangent line to the graph of kinetic energy at a given velocity, is directly proportional to mass and velocity. The discussion emphasizes the importance of understanding both differentiation and integration, particularly in the context of the Work-Energy Theorem, which relates the net work done to changes in kinetic energy. For a comprehensive understanding, familiarity with calculus concepts, especially integration, is essential.

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Taturana
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Hi.

I differentiated the equation of kinetic energy

E(v) = \tfrac{1}{2} mv^2

and I got:

E'(v) = mv.

I'm new to the concept of derivatives so I only know that it means that m*v is the slope of a tangent line to the graph of E at a given point.

But I can't really understand the exact meaning of it (if there are any).

Could someone explain me more about this?

Thank you
 
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If you're not familiar with calculus a "real" derivation is difficult, in this case what you've just done (while correct) is of little use at all;

I'll outline the more traditional approach, if you've not covered integration I'm afraid you might struggle, the use of the \int ^{x1}_{x2} f(x)dx indicates that you're trying to find the area under the curve of a graph (y = f(x)) between two arbitrary points on the x-axis, x1 and x2 (x1 > x2)

The "Work - Energy Theorum" states that the net work done is the change in kinetic energy, so the work done is given by; (Work done is the force multiplied by the distance it has acted over)

W = \int ^{x1}_{x2} F =\int ^{x1}_{x2} m\frac{dv}{dt} dx

now we also know that \frac{dx}{dt}= v so we can make a substitution showing that dx = v dt

so putting that in;

W = \int ^{x1}_{x2} m\frac{dv}{dt}v dt =\int ^{v1}_{v2} mv dv = 0.5 m(v1^2-v2^2) = 0.5 m(v1^2-v2^2)

What i will say is that if you've not encountered this stuff before, DON'T be intimidated, this is not a particularly easy derivation and when you've had an introduction to calculus this will be bread-and-butter stuff.

About the tangeant line, see this link

http://www.intmath.com/Differentiation/3_Derivative-first-principles.php

it's very clear and concise, differentiation is a wonderful operation
 
Last edited:
This would only make sense if V is a function of time (t) or distance across some path (s). In those cases the derivative is the slope of the function V(t) or V(s). Chewy explained the meaning of this when V is a function of time.
 
You COULD reverse-engineer my proof above, starting with d(e)/dv = mv, then multiplying by dv and substituting (to find the work done - again referring to the work-energy theorum) but that's not very clear at all.
 
Thank you very much Chewy0087 for the explanation.

I didn't fully understand it because I'm not familiar with the concept of integration, but I'll study integration (I'm studying through MIT OpenCouseware) and try to understand your reply.

I'll take a look in the link you sent too...

Thank you

You guys can continue posting things if you want... Every help is welcome =D
 
You should definateley study differentiation before integration, the MIT courseware is great - have a look at the 18.01 set of lectures (single variable calculus), they're accelerated but good.

Good luck!
 
Taturana said:
Hi.

I differentiated the equation of kinetic energy

E(v) = \tfrac{1}{2} mv^2

and I got:

E'(v) = mv.

I'm new to the concept of derivatives so I only know that it means that m*v is the slope of a tangent line to the graph of E at a given point.

But I can't really understand the exact meaning of it (if there are any).

Could someone explain me more about this?

Thank you

Are you differentiating the kinetic energy wrt time? If so, then
d(mv^2/2)/dt = mv(dv/dt) = mva = mav = Fv. Hope this helps.
 
Hey I have another question but I won't open new topic.

In the website that Chewy0087 linked to this topic, at the lesson 4 it says:

A reader recently asked:

"Yes, but what does dy/dt really mean?"

Here was my reply:

In summary, "dy/dt" means "change in y compared to change in t at a precise value of t."

It is used where the quantity "y" is undergoing constant change. Let's use the example of temperature. Say you are in Melbourne, Australia (where daily extremes of temperature are common :-), and we want to know how fast the temperature is increasing right now.

Now a question appears: to know how fast the temperature is increasing, we need to know the temperature at least in two moments to compare. I know that derivative tell us how fast the temperature is increasing right now. But, how derivatives do it with just one input? There shouldn't be at least two inputs?

Can someone explain me this?
 
Taturana said:
Hey I have another question but I won't open new topic.

In the website that Chewy0087 linked to this topic, at the lesson 4 it says:



Now a question appears: to know how fast the temperature is increasing, we need to know the temperature at least in two moments to compare. I know that derivative tell us how fast the temperature is increasing right now. But, how derivatives do it with just one input? There shouldn't be at least two inputs?

Can someone explain me this?

The way I think of this problem is as follows: Record the temperature at times t-dt/2 and t+dt/2. Then the MEAN rate of change during the time interval from t-dt/2 to t+dt/2 is (T(t+dt/2) - T(t-dt/2))/dt. Now begin shrinking the size of dt. (T(t+dt/2) - T(t-dt/2)) will also get smaller. Take it to the limit where dt becomes infinitesimal. (T(t+dt/2) - T(t-dt/2)) will also be infinitesimal. And the ratio of two infinitesimal values can be a perfectly finite quotient. You call this ratio the rate of change of T AT time the single time t.
 

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