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#1 2006-02-11 02:01:27

rp_
Member
Registered: 2006-02-10
Posts: 7

Finding the derivative

Can someone please help me find the derivative of this:

y=+3√(16-x²)/4


Could you please let me know how this is to be worked. Stating any general rules i should know

Many thanks in advance

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#2 2006-02-11 02:53:17

irspow
Member
Registered: 2005-11-24
Posts: 1,055

Re: Finding the derivative

The first thing that you must realize is that this is a composition function.  That just means that there is a function nested within another function.  To find the derivative of a composition function you need to take two derivatives, multiplying the outer derivative by the inner derivative.


  You have:

y = 3√(16 - x²)/4,   I am assuming that everything after the radical sign is within it here

   It is not 3/4(√(16 - x²)....right?

The first thing that I would do is to get everything within the radical sign;

y = √[(144 - 9x²) / 4]

The derivative of √x is 1 / (2√x)

So the outer derivative is just;

  1 / {2√[(144 - 9x²) / 4]}

The derivative of the inner function ( 144 - 9x²) / 4 is;

If you are not sure what the derivative of a fraction is, this is the formula;

if y = f(g)/f(h)

y' = [f'(g)f(h) - f(g)f'(h)] / f(h)²

Getting back to the problem at hand, ( 144 - 9x²) / 4 and using the formula above gives;

  [-18x(4) - 0(144 - 9x²)] / 16 =  -9x / 2

Multiplying our outer derivative by our inner derivative gives;

  1 / {2√[(144 - 9x²) / 4]}  ×  -9x / 2 = -x / [9√(16 - x²)]


  I hope this helps...if you did not understand any of the steps just ask.

Last edited by irspow (2006-02-11 05:05:42)


I am at an age where I have forgotten more than I remember, but I still pretend to know it all.

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