The Chain Rule Rule for finding the derivative of a composition of two functions. If y is a function of u and u is a function of x, then y is a function.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
2.4 The Chain Rule If f and g are both differentiable and F is the composite function defined by F(x)=f(g(x)), then F is differentiable and F′ is given.
Advertisements

Consider the function We could make a graph of the slope: slope Now we connect the dots! The resulting curve is a cosine curve. 2.3 Derivatives of Trigonometric.
Complex Functions These derivatives involve embedded composite, product, and quotient rules. The functions f or g must be derived using another rule.
The Chain Rule By Dr. Julia Arnold.
4.5 Integration by Substitution
The Chain Rule Section 3.6c.
Monday, February 25, 2013MAT 145. Monday, February 25, 2013MAT 145.
3 DERIVATIVES.
Economics 240 Lecture 21 Univariate Calculus. Chain Rule Many economic situations involve a chain of relationships that relate an ultimate outcome to.
Composition of Functions: The process of combining two or more functions in order to create another function. One function is evaluated at a value of the.
Friday, February 10, 2012MAT 121. Friday, February 10, 2012MAT 121.
Section 2.4 – The Chain Rule. Example 1 If and, find. COMPOSITION OF FUNCTIONS.
Decimal Division You must learn the rules. Dividing a decimal by a whole number 1.2 ÷ 2 Divisor = 2 Dividend = 1.2 Step 1: move the decimal in the dividend.
Objectives for Section 11.2 Derivatives of Exp/Log Functions
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. 4 Techniques of Differentiation with Applications.
In this section, we will learn about: Differentiating composite functions using the Chain Rule. DIFFERENTIATION RULES 3.4 The Chain Rule.
3 DERIVATIVES. In this section, we will learn about: Differentiating composite functions using the Chain Rule. DERIVATIVES 3.5 The Chain Rule.
Integration by Substitution Undoing the Chain Rule TS: Making Decisions After Reflection & Review.
Derivatives of Composite Functions: The Chain Rule Section 3.7 (pages 107 – 110) Morgan Woods.
Techniques of Differentiation 1.Definition of Derivative 2.Power Rule 3.Chain Rule 4.Product Rule 5.Quotient Rule.
Section 3.4 The Chain Rule. One of THE MOST POWERFUL Rules of Differentiation The chain rule allows you to take derivatives of compositions of functions.
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. 2 Derivatives.
Katie Bisciotti Alyssa Mayer Andrew Stacy
MAT 213 Brief Calculus Section 3.4 The Chain Rule.
3.4 - The Chain Rule. The Chain Rule: Defined If f and g are both differentiable and F = f ◦ g is the composite function defined by F(x) = f(g(x)), then.
Calculus Section 2.4 The Chain Rule. Used for finding the derivative of composite functions Think dimensional analysis Ex. Change 17hours to seconds.
Thursday, February 9, 2012MAT 121. Thursday, February 9, 2012MAT 121.
Section 3.4 The Chain Rule. Consider the function –We can “decompose” this function into two functions we know how to take the derivative of –For example.
In this section, we will investigate how to take the derivative of a function that is the composition of multiple functions.
3 DERIVATIVES.  Remember, they are valid only when x is measured in radians.  For more details see Chapter 3, Section 4 or the PowerPoint file Chapter3_Sec4.ppt.
Ch. 4 – More Derivatives 4.1 – Chain Rule. Ex: Find the derivative of h(x) = sin(2x 2 ). –This is not a product rule problem because it has one function.
And the Distributive Property.  You previously learned about the distributive property, but in case you have forgotten about it…  Given two terms, the.
Further Differentiation and Integration
Chain Rule 3.5. Consider: These can all be thought of as composite functions F(g(x)) Derivatives of Composite functions are found using the chain rule.
In this section, we will learn about: Differentiating composite functions using the Chain Rule. DERIVATIVES 3.5 The Chain Rule.
CHAPTER 4 DIFFERENTIATION NHAA/IMK/UNIMAP. INTRODUCTION Differentiation – Process of finding the derivative of a function. Notation NHAA/IMK/UNIMAP.
derivatives chain rule
Warm Up. Solving Differential Equations General and Particular solutions.
Product and Quotient Rule Find the derivative of the function using the Product Rule Find the derivative of the function using the Quotient Rule Find the.
Chapter 17.2 The Derivative. How do we use the derivative?? When graphing the derivative, you are graphing the slope of the original function.
Wednesday, February 8, 2012MAT 121. Wednesday, February 8, 2012MAT 121.
Chapter 3 Techniques of Differentiation. § 3.1 The Product and Quotient Rules.
1.7 Copyright © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. The Chain Rule OBJECTIVE Find the composition of two functions. Differentiate using the Extended Power Rule.
3.1 The Product and Quotient Rules & 3.2 The Chain Rule and the General Power Rule.
2-1 The Derivative and the Tangent Line Problem 2-2 Basic Differentiation Rules and Rates of Change 2-3 Product/Quotient Rule and Higher-Order Derivatives.
After the test… No calculator 3. Given the function defined by for a) State whether the function is even or odd. Justify. b) Find f’(x) c) Write an equation.
4 - 1 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.. All rights reserved. Chapter 4 Calculating the Derivative.
The Chain Rule Greg Kelly, Hanford High School, Richland, WashingtonPhoto by Vickie Kelly, 2002 online.math.uh.edu/HoustonACT/Greg_Kelly.../Calc03_6.ppt.
Friday, February 12, 2016MAT 145. Friday, February 12, 2016MAT 145.
Monday, February 15, 2016MAT 145. Function typeDerivative Rule Constant for constant c Power for any real number n Product of constant and functions for.
HPC 2.6 – Operations on Functions; Composite Functions Learning Targets: -Form the sum, difference, product, and quotient of two functions. -Form the composite.
Section 3.7 Implicit Functions
Implicit Differentiation
3.6 Chain Rule.
CHAPTER 4 DIFFERENTIATION.
Chapter 3 Derivatives.
Lesson 1.5 Combinations of Functions
Calculating the Derivative
What we can do.
Implicit Differentiation
§2.3 The Chain Rule and Higher Order Derivatives
Unit 3 More Derivatives Chain Rule.
The Chain Rule Find the composition of two functions.
AP Calculus AB 4.1 The Chain Rule.
Used for composite functions (a function within a function)…
31 – Power, Product, Quotient Rule No Calculator
Calculus I (MAT 145) Dr. Day Monday February 18, 2019
Chain Rule Chain Rule.
Chapter 3 Chain Rule.
Presentation transcript:

The Chain Rule Rule for finding the derivative of a composition of two functions. If y is a function of u and u is a function of x, then y is a function of x. The chain rule tell us how to find the derivative of y with respect to x TexPoint fonts used in EMF. Read the TexPoint manual before you delete this box.: AA A A A A AA

Example A factory produces 50 items per hour and the manufacturing costs are $0.25 per item. What is the manufacturing cost per hour at the factory? Manufacturing costs are $12.50 per hour. Answer comes from multiplying the rates: (0.25 $/item)(50 items/hour) = $/hour That’s the chain rule!

Let be the manufacturing cost in dollars. Let be the number of items produced. Let be the time in hours cost per hour = (cost / item)(items / hour) In terms of derivatives:

The Chain Rule Suppose is a differentiable function of and is a differentiable function of Then is a differentiable function of

The Chain Rule We have The derivative of is given by equivalently,

then To use: Think of as an “outside function” applied to an “inside function” Use a new variable for the “inside function” Rewrite the “outside function” in terms of the new variable Take the derivatives and multiply Rewrite all in terms of the original variable Tricky part is deciding what is the “inside function” and “outside function”

Find the derivative of Let “inside function” Then “outside function” where f(x)=u 2 ;u=2x 2 +1 f 0 (x)=2u;u 0 =4x

Without the chain rule: This agrees with our previous calculation!

Find the derivative of Let “inside function” Then “outside function”

The General Power Rule Combine the Power Rule and Chain Rule If is differentiable and is any real number, then

Apply to Then where By the Generalized Power Rule

Sometimes the chain rule must be combined with the product or quotient rule. For example, to differentiate we use the product rule, but we must use the chain rule to take the derivative of