2001 HSC - Q4(c) (1 Viewer)

Stefano

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I feel sick. I'm having so much trouble with simple questions like this.
In the solutions they appear to be using the product rule. Why ?

I thought the solution to this was: 1/[1+(x/x+1)<sup>2</sup>] + 1/[1+(1/2x+1)<sup>2</sup>] (unsimplified)
 

KFunk

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Stefano said:
I feel sick. I'm having so much trouble with simple questions like this.
In the solutions they appear to be using the product rule. Why ?

I thought the solution to this was: 1/[1+(x/x+1)<sup>2</sup>] + 1/[1+(1/2x+1)<sup>2</sup>] (unsimplified)
Think of a general situation: let y = tan<sup>-1</sup>[f(x)]. When you see this you do as substitution so:

y = tan<sup>-1</sup>u ............................ u = f(x)

dy/du = 1/(1 + u<sup>2</sup>) .................du/dx = f'(x)

hence dy/dx = 1/(1 + f(x)<sup>2</sup>) . f'(x)

What you have forgotten to do is multiply by the derivative of the function within tan<sup>-1</sup>.

1/[1+(x/x+1)<sup>2</sup>].d/dx(x/[x+1]) + 1/[1+(1/2x+1)<sup>2</sup>]d/dx(1/[2x+1]) should end up as zero.
 

Stefano

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KFunk said:
Think of a general situation: let y = tan<sup>-1</sup>[f(x)]. When you see this you do as substitution so:

y = tan<sup>-1</sup>u ............................ u = f(x)

dy/du = 1/(1 + u<sup>2</sup>) .................du/dx = f'(x)

hence dy/dx = 1/(1 + f(x)<sup>2</sup>) . f'(x)

What you have forgotten to do is multiply by the derivative of the function within tan<sup>-1</sup>.

1/[1+(x/x+1)<sup>2</sup>].d/dx(x/[x+1]) + 1/[1+(1/2x+1)<sup>2</sup>]d/dx(1/[2x+1]) should end up as zero.

Aaahhhh!! Chain Rule! I didn't think it was necessary.

So, in summary: If y=tan<sup>-1</sup>[F(x)], then:
dy/dx= f'(x)/{1+[f(x)]<sup>2</sup> } ?
 

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