Difference between revisions of "009A Sample Final 1, Problem 3"
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<span class="exam">Find the derivatives of the following functions. | <span class="exam">Find the derivatives of the following functions. | ||
| − | <span class="exam">a) <math style="vertical-align: -14px">f(x)=\ln \bigg(\frac{x^2-1}{x^2+1}\bigg)</math> | + | <span class="exam">(a) <math style="vertical-align: -14px">f(x)=\ln \bigg(\frac{x^2-1}{x^2+1}\bigg)</math> |
| − | <span class="exam">b) <math style="vertical-align: -3px">g(x)=2\sin (4x)+4\tan (\sqrt{1+x^3})</math> | + | <span class="exam">(b) <math style="vertical-align: -3px">g(x)=2\sin (4x)+4\tan (\sqrt{1+x^3})</math> |
{| class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style = "text-align:left;" | {| class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style = "text-align:left;" | ||
Revision as of 18:43, 18 February 2017
Find the derivatives of the following functions.
(a)
(b)
| Foundations: |
|---|
| For functions and , recall |
| Chain Rule: |
| Quotient Rule: |
| Trig Derivatives: |
Solution:
(a)
| Step 1: |
|---|
| Using the Chain Rule, we have |
| Step 2: |
|---|
| Now, we need to calculate |
| To do this, we use the Quotient Rule. So, we have |
(b)
| Step 1: |
|---|
| Again, we need to use the Chain Rule. We have |
|
|
| Step 2: |
|---|
| We need to calculate |
| We use the Chain Rule again to get |
|
|
| Final Answer: |
|---|
| (a) |
| (b) |