Differentiating Logs (1 Viewer)

Timske

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Yes, quite Lol

My teacher helped me with this question and she went from:
logx-x^2 + 1 - x to
logx - 2x + 1

Im just not sure where the x^2 went...
However, she still got the right answer
d/dx lnx - x^2 + 1 - x = -2x + 1/x - 1 ,
 

Coookies

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Where did the 1/x come from?

Also, isn't ln for loge? Just wondering...
 

Timske

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loge = ln


d/dx ln(fx) = f'x/fx
hence, d/dx lnx = 1/x

logx-x^2 + 1 - x

d/dx logx = 1/x
d/dx -x^2 = -2x
d/dx 1 = 0
d/dx -x = -1

:. -2x + 1/x -1
Log(x) = ln(x) = loge(x)
 
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Coookies

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Thanks!
I saw logx-x^2 as a whole thing. Didn't know you could separate them.

For Q10, is the differentiation (1-lnx)/x^2 right?
If so, when I make it equal 0, I get lnx=1 and then I don't know what to do.
 

Timske

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Thanks!
I saw logx-x^2 as a whole thing. Didn't know you could separate them.

For Q10, is the differentiation (1-lnx)/x^2 right?
If so, when I make it equal 0, I get lnx=1 and then I don't know what to do.
Lnx=1 get rid of ln by multiplying by e

elnx = e
x=e
 

Coookies

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Would they expect a maths adv student to do that?
Multiplying is much less complicated lol!
 

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One last question, how would I test it? lol, whats on either side of e?
 

D94

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Would they expect a maths adv student to do that?
Multiplying is much less complicated lol!
Yes, of course. What do you mean "multiplying"? There isn't multiplying :s To remove the logarithm, you take the exponents of both sides; that's the best method.
 

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So once I've raised them both, how do I get to x=e?

& I tried that but its all increasing (answer says max)
 

D94

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So once I've raised them both, how do I get to x=e?

& I tried that but its all increasing (answer says max)
eloge(x) = e1

Hm, it sounds like you haven't been given a good explanation yet. One of the most important concepts is to raise log by e or to raise e by log; they are sort of like inverses of each other, and can cancel each other out. But, not like multiplication/division, they are powers of each other. (You're going to need a better explanation of the whole log and e relation, because it's too easy to just take these things for granted)

Anyway, it should be a maximum; let x = 2, y' = (1 - ln(2))/4 > 0, and when x = 3, y' = (1 - ln(3))/9 < 0.
 

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