Title: The derivative as the slope of the tangent line
1The derivative as the slope of the tangent line
(at a point)
2What is a derivative?
- A function
- the rate of change of a function
- the slope of the line tangent to the curve
3The tangent line
single point of intersection
4slope of a secant line
f(a) - f(x)
a - x
f(x)
f(a)
x
a
5slope of a (closer) secant line
f(a) - f(x)
a - x
f(x)
f(a)
a
x
x
6closer and closer
a
7watch the slope...
8watch what x does...
x
a
9The slope of the secant line gets closer and
closer to the slope of the tangent line...
10As the values of x get closer and closer to a!
x
a
11The slope of the secant lines gets closer to the
slope of the tangent line...
...as the values of x get closer to a
Translates to.
12f(x) - f(a)
lim
x - a
a
x
as x goes to a
Equation for the slope
Which gives us the the exact slope of the line
tangent to the curve at a!
13similarly...
f(xh) - f(x)
(xh) - x
f(xh) - f(x)
h
f(ah)
h
f(a)
ah
a
(For this particular curve, h is a negative value)
14thus...
lim f(ah) - f(a)
h 0
h
AND
lim f(x) - f(a)
x a
x - a
Give us a way to calculate the slope of the line
tangent at a!
15Which one should I use?
(doesnt really matter)
16A VERY simple example...
want the slope where a2
17as x a2
18As h 0
19back to our example...
When a2, the slope is 4
20in conclusion...
- The derivative is the the slope of the line
tangent to the curve (evaluated at a point) - it is a limit (2 ways to define it)
- once you learn the rules of derivatives, you WILL
forget these limit definitions - cool site to go to for additional
explanationshttp//archives.math.utk.edu/visual.c
alculus/2/