Title: 3.7 Implicit Differentiation
13.7 Implicit Differentiation
- What youll learn about
- Implicitly defined functions
- Lenses, tangents, and normal lines
- Derivatives of Higher Order
- Rational Powers of Differentiable Functions
- Why?
- Implicit differentiation allows us to find
derivatives of functions that are not defined or
written explicitly as a function of a single
variable.
2Differentiating a Function in Terms of Both x and
y
- Find dy/dx if y2 x.
- Differentiate both sides with respect to x
- Get dy/dx on one side and all else on the other.
- The graph shown on p157 gives the curve and the
tangent lines at the points (4,2) and 4,-2).
Dy/dx gives the slope of both of these lines. - You try
3Find the slope of the circle
at the point (2,-2) using example 2.
- Find dy/dx
- Put point (x,y) into formula to find slope
4Show that the slope dy/dx is defined at every
point on the graph of 2y x2 sin y.
- HOW?
- Differentiate both sides with respect to x.
- Get all dy/dx terms on one side of equation, all
else on the other. - Factor dy/dx out, group other factors with ()
- Divide to get dy/dx alone
-
5Lenses, Tangents, and Normal Lines
- In the law that describes how light changes
direction as it enters a lens, the important
angles are the angles the light make with the
line perpendicular to the surface of the lens at
the point of entry. This line is called the
normal to the surface at the point of entry. In
a profile view of a lens, the normal is a line
perpendicular to the tangent to the profile curve
at the point of entry. (p159 / figure 3.51) - Profiles of lenses are often described by
quadratic curves. When they are, we can use
implicit differentiation to find the tangents and
normals.
6Find the tangent and normal to the ellipse x2
xy y2 7 at the point (-1,2).
- Differentiate to find dy/dx.
- Use the product rule to differentiate xy,
- group terms in ( ).
- Find slope of tangent using dy/dx.
- Write the tangent equation using that slope and
the point (-1, 2). - Write the normal equation using the opposite
reciprocal slope and the point (-1, 2).
7Homework
- Page 162
- Exercises 3-21, (3n, n?I)
8Warm Up
- Page 164 Exercises 59-64
- Skip 62
- No Calculator!
9Finding a Second Derivative Implicitly
- Find if 2x3 3y2 8.
- y
-
- y
-
- sub y into 2nd derivative and simplify
10Rule 9 Power Rule for Rational Powers of x
- If n is any rational number (fraction), then
- If n lt 1,
- then the derivative does not exist at x 0.
- Why?
11Use the Rational Power Rule
12Homework
- Page 162
- Exercises 24-42 (3n, n?I),
- 45a, 54