+ follow lesson 11: implicit differentiation (section 21 slides

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Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation V63.0121.021, Calculus I New York University October 12, 2010 Announcements I Quiz 2 in recitation this week. Covers §§1.5, 1.6, 2.1, 2.2 I Midterm next week. Covers §§1.1–2.5 . . . . . .

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Using implicit differentiation we can treat relations which are not quite functions like they were functions. In particular, we can find the slopes of lines tangent to curves which are not graphs of functions.

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Page 1: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

Section 2.6Implicit Differentiation

V63.0121.021, Calculus I

New York University

October 12, 2010

Announcements

I Quiz 2 in recitation this week. Covers §§1.5, 1.6, 2.1, 2.2I Midterm next week. Covers §§1.1–2.5

. . . . . .

Page 2: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Announcements

I Quiz 2 in recitation thisweek. Covers §§1.5, 1.6,2.1, 2.2

I Midterm next week.Covers §§1.1–2.5

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 2 / 34

Page 3: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Objectives

I Use implicit differentationto find the derivative of afunction defined implicitly.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 3 / 34

Page 4: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Outline

The big idea, by example

ExamplesBasic ExamplesVertical and Horizontal TangentsOrthogonal TrajectoriesChemistry

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 4 / 34

Page 5: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Motivating Example

ProblemFind the slope of the linewhich is tangent to thecurve

x2 + y2 = 1

at the point (3/5,−4/5).

. .x

.y

.

Solution (Explicit)

I Isolate: y2 = 1− x2 =⇒ y = −√1− x2. (Why the −?)

I Differentiate:dydx

= − −2x2√1− x2

=x√

1− x2

I Evaluate:dydx

∣∣∣∣x=3/5

=3/5√

1− (3/5)2=

3/54/5

=34.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 5 / 34

Page 6: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Motivating Example

ProblemFind the slope of the linewhich is tangent to thecurve

x2 + y2 = 1

at the point (3/5,−4/5).

. .x

.y

.

Solution (Explicit)

I Isolate: y2 = 1− x2 =⇒ y = −√1− x2. (Why the −?)

I Differentiate:dydx

= − −2x2√1− x2

=x√

1− x2

I Evaluate:dydx

∣∣∣∣x=3/5

=3/5√

1− (3/5)2=

3/54/5

=34.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 5 / 34

Page 7: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Motivating Example

ProblemFind the slope of the linewhich is tangent to thecurve

x2 + y2 = 1

at the point (3/5,−4/5).

. .x

.y

.

Solution (Explicit)

I Isolate: y2 = 1− x2 =⇒ y = −√1− x2. (Why the −?)

I Differentiate:dydx

= − −2x2√1− x2

=x√

1− x2

I Evaluate:dydx

∣∣∣∣x=3/5

=3/5√

1− (3/5)2=

3/54/5

=34.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 5 / 34

Page 8: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Motivating Example

ProblemFind the slope of the linewhich is tangent to thecurve

x2 + y2 = 1

at the point (3/5,−4/5).

. .x

.y

.

Solution (Explicit)

I Isolate: y2 = 1− x2 =⇒ y = −√1− x2. (Why the −?)

I Differentiate:dydx

= − −2x2√1− x2

=x√

1− x2

I Evaluate:dydx

∣∣∣∣x=3/5

=3/5√

1− (3/5)2=

3/54/5

=34.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 5 / 34

Page 9: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Motivating Example

ProblemFind the slope of the linewhich is tangent to thecurve

x2 + y2 = 1

at the point (3/5,−4/5).

. .x

.y

.

Solution (Explicit)

I Isolate: y2 = 1− x2 =⇒ y = −√1− x2. (Why the −?)

I Differentiate:dydx

= − −2x2√1− x2

=x√

1− x2

I Evaluate:dydx

∣∣∣∣x=3/5

=3/5√

1− (3/5)2=

3/54/5

=34.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 5 / 34

Page 10: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Motivating Example

ProblemFind the slope of the linewhich is tangent to thecurve

x2 + y2 = 1

at the point (3/5,−4/5).

. .x

.y

.

Solution (Explicit)

I Isolate: y2 = 1− x2 =⇒ y = −√1− x2. (Why the −?)

I Differentiate:dydx

= − −2x2√1− x2

=x√

1− x2

I Evaluate:dydx

∣∣∣∣x=3/5

=3/5√

1− (3/5)2=

3/54/5

=34.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 5 / 34

Page 11: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Motivating Example

ProblemFind the slope of the linewhich is tangent to thecurve

x2 + y2 = 1

at the point (3/5,−4/5).

. .x

.y

.

Solution (Explicit)

I Isolate: y2 = 1− x2 =⇒ y = −√1− x2. (Why the −?)

I Differentiate:dydx

= − −2x2√1− x2

=x√

1− x2

I Evaluate:dydx

∣∣∣∣x=3/5

=3/5√

1− (3/5)2=

3/54/5

=34.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 5 / 34

Page 12: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Motivating Example, another way

We know that x2 + y2 = 1 does not define y as a function of x, butsuppose it did.

I Suppose we had y = f(x), so that

x2 + (f(x))2 = 1

I We could differentiate this equation to get

2x+ 2f(x) · f′(x) = 0

I We could then solve to get

f′(x) = − xf(x)

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 6 / 34

Page 13: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Motivating Example, another way

We know that x2 + y2 = 1 does not define y as a function of x, butsuppose it did.

I Suppose we had y = f(x), so that

x2 + (f(x))2 = 1

I We could differentiate this equation to get

2x+ 2f(x) · f′(x) = 0

I We could then solve to get

f′(x) = − xf(x)

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 6 / 34

Page 14: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Motivating Example, another way

We know that x2 + y2 = 1 does not define y as a function of x, butsuppose it did.

I Suppose we had y = f(x), so that

x2 + (f(x))2 = 1

I We could differentiate this equation to get

2x+ 2f(x) · f′(x) = 0

I We could then solve to get

f′(x) = − xf(x)

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 6 / 34

Page 15: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Yes, we can!

The beautiful fact (i.e., deep theorem) is that this works!

I “Near” most points on thecurve x2 + y2 = 1, thecurve resembles the graphof a function.

I So f(x) is defined “locally”,almost everywhere and isdifferentiable

I The chain rule then appliesfor this local choice.

. .x

.y

.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 7 / 34

Page 16: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Yes, we can!

The beautiful fact (i.e., deep theorem) is that this works!

I “Near” most points on thecurve x2 + y2 = 1, thecurve resembles the graphof a function.

I So f(x) is defined “locally”,almost everywhere and isdifferentiable

I The chain rule then appliesfor this local choice.

. .x

.y

.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 7 / 34

Page 17: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Yes, we can!

The beautiful fact (i.e., deep theorem) is that this works!

I “Near” most points on thecurve x2 + y2 = 1, thecurve resembles the graphof a function.

I So f(x) is defined “locally”,almost everywhere and isdifferentiable

I The chain rule then appliesfor this local choice.

. .x

.y

.

.looks like a function

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 7 / 34

Page 18: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Yes, we can!

The beautiful fact (i.e., deep theorem) is that this works!

I “Near” most points on thecurve x2 + y2 = 1, thecurve resembles the graphof a function.

I So f(x) is defined “locally”,almost everywhere and isdifferentiable

I The chain rule then appliesfor this local choice.

. .x

.y

.

.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 7 / 34

Page 19: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Yes, we can!

The beautiful fact (i.e., deep theorem) is that this works!

I “Near” most points on thecurve x2 + y2 = 1, thecurve resembles the graphof a function.

I So f(x) is defined “locally”,almost everywhere and isdifferentiable

I The chain rule then appliesfor this local choice.

. .x

.y

.

.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 7 / 34

Page 20: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Yes, we can!

The beautiful fact (i.e., deep theorem) is that this works!

I “Near” most points on thecurve x2 + y2 = 1, thecurve resembles the graphof a function.

I So f(x) is defined “locally”,almost everywhere and isdifferentiable

I The chain rule then appliesfor this local choice.

. .x

.y

.

.

.looks like a function

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 7 / 34

Page 21: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Yes, we can!

The beautiful fact (i.e., deep theorem) is that this works!

I “Near” most points on thecurve x2 + y2 = 1, thecurve resembles the graphof a function.

I So f(x) is defined “locally”,almost everywhere and isdifferentiable

I The chain rule then appliesfor this local choice.

. .x

.y

.

.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 7 / 34

Page 22: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Yes, we can!

The beautiful fact (i.e., deep theorem) is that this works!

I “Near” most points on thecurve x2 + y2 = 1, thecurve resembles the graphof a function.

I So f(x) is defined “locally”,almost everywhere and isdifferentiable

I The chain rule then appliesfor this local choice.

. .x

.y

.

.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 7 / 34

Page 23: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Yes, we can!

The beautiful fact (i.e., deep theorem) is that this works!

I “Near” most points on thecurve x2 + y2 = 1, thecurve resembles the graphof a function.

I So f(x) is defined “locally”,almost everywhere and isdifferentiable

I The chain rule then appliesfor this local choice.

. .x

.y

.

..does not look like afunction, but that’sOK—there are onlytwo points like this

.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 7 / 34

Page 24: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Yes, we can!

The beautiful fact (i.e., deep theorem) is that this works!

I “Near” most points on thecurve x2 + y2 = 1, thecurve resembles the graphof a function.

I So f(x) is defined “locally”,almost everywhere and isdifferentiable

I The chain rule then appliesfor this local choice.

. .x

.y

.

.looks like a function

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 7 / 34

Page 25: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Yes, we can!

The beautiful fact (i.e., deep theorem) is that this works!

I “Near” most points on thecurve x2 + y2 = 1, thecurve resembles the graphof a function.

I So f(x) is defined “locally”,almost everywhere and isdifferentiable

I The chain rule then appliesfor this local choice.

. .x

.y

.

.looks like a function

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 7 / 34

Page 26: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Motivating Example, again, with Leibniz notation

ProblemFind the slope of the line which is tangent to the curve x2 + y2 = 1 atthe point (3/5,−4/5).

Solution

I Differentiate: 2x+ 2ydydx

= 0Remember y is assumed to be a function of x!

I Isolate:dydx

= −xy.

I Evaluate:dydx

∣∣∣∣( 35 ,−

45)

=3/54/5

=34.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 8 / 34

Page 27: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Motivating Example, again, with Leibniz notation

ProblemFind the slope of the line which is tangent to the curve x2 + y2 = 1 atthe point (3/5,−4/5).

Solution

I Differentiate: 2x+ 2ydydx

= 0

Remember y is assumed to be a function of x!

I Isolate:dydx

= −xy.

I Evaluate:dydx

∣∣∣∣( 35 ,−

45)

=3/54/5

=34.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 8 / 34

Page 28: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Motivating Example, again, with Leibniz notation

ProblemFind the slope of the line which is tangent to the curve x2 + y2 = 1 atthe point (3/5,−4/5).

Solution

I Differentiate: 2x+ 2ydydx

= 0Remember y is assumed to be a function of x!

I Isolate:dydx

= −xy.

I Evaluate:dydx

∣∣∣∣( 35 ,−

45)

=3/54/5

=34.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 8 / 34

Page 29: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Motivating Example, again, with Leibniz notation

ProblemFind the slope of the line which is tangent to the curve x2 + y2 = 1 atthe point (3/5,−4/5).

Solution

I Differentiate: 2x+ 2ydydx

= 0Remember y is assumed to be a function of x!

I Isolate:dydx

= −xy.

I Evaluate:dydx

∣∣∣∣( 35 ,−

45)

=3/54/5

=34.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 8 / 34

Page 30: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Motivating Example, again, with Leibniz notation

ProblemFind the slope of the line which is tangent to the curve x2 + y2 = 1 atthe point (3/5,−4/5).

Solution

I Differentiate: 2x+ 2ydydx

= 0Remember y is assumed to be a function of x!

I Isolate:dydx

= −xy.

I Evaluate:dydx

∣∣∣∣( 35 ,−

45)

=3/54/5

=34.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 8 / 34

Page 31: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Summary

If a relation is given between x and y which isn’t a function:

I “Most of the time”, i.e., “atmost places” y can beassumed to be a function of x

I we may differentiate therelation as is

I Solving fordydx

does give theslope of the tangent line to thecurve at a point on the curve.

. .x

.y

.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 9 / 34

Page 32: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Outline

The big idea, by example

ExamplesBasic ExamplesVertical and Horizontal TangentsOrthogonal TrajectoriesChemistry

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 10 / 34

Page 33: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Another Example

Example

Find y′ along the curve y3 + 4xy = x2 + 3.

SolutionImplicitly differentiating, we have

3y2y′ + 4(1 · y+ x · y′) = 2x

Solving for y′ gives

3y2y′ + 4xy′ = 2x− 4y

(3y2 + 4x)y′ = 2x− 4y

=⇒ y′ =2x− 4y3y2 + 4x

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 11 / 34

Page 34: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Another Example

Example

Find y′ along the curve y3 + 4xy = x2 + 3.

SolutionImplicitly differentiating, we have

3y2y′ + 4(1 · y+ x · y′) = 2x

Solving for y′ gives

3y2y′ + 4xy′ = 2x− 4y

(3y2 + 4x)y′ = 2x− 4y

=⇒ y′ =2x− 4y3y2 + 4x

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 11 / 34

Page 35: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Another Example

Example

Find y′ along the curve y3 + 4xy = x2 + 3.

SolutionImplicitly differentiating, we have

3y2y′ + 4(1 · y+ x · y′) = 2x

Solving for y′ gives

3y2y′ + 4xy′ = 2x− 4y

(3y2 + 4x)y′ = 2x− 4y

=⇒ y′ =2x− 4y3y2 + 4x

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 11 / 34

Page 36: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Yet Another Example

Example

Find y′ if y5 + x2y3 = 1+ y sin(x2).

SolutionDifferentiating implicitly:

5y4y′ + (2x)y3 + x2(3y2y′) = y′ sin(x2) + y cos(x2)(2x)

Collect all terms with y′ on one side and all terms without y′ on theother:

5y4y′ + 3x2y2y′ − sin(x2)y′ = −2xy3 + 2xy cos(x2)

Now factor and divide:

y′ =2xy(cos x2 − y2)

5y4 + 3x2y2 − sin x2

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 12 / 34

Page 37: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Yet Another Example

Example

Find y′ if y5 + x2y3 = 1+ y sin(x2).

SolutionDifferentiating implicitly:

5y4y′ + (2x)y3 + x2(3y2y′) = y′ sin(x2) + y cos(x2)(2x)

Collect all terms with y′ on one side and all terms without y′ on theother:

5y4y′ + 3x2y2y′ − sin(x2)y′ = −2xy3 + 2xy cos(x2)

Now factor and divide:

y′ =2xy(cos x2 − y2)

5y4 + 3x2y2 − sin x2

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 12 / 34

Page 38: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Finding tangent lines with implicit differentitiation.

.

Example

Find the equation of the linetangent to the curve

y2 = x2(x+ 1) = x3 + x2

at the point (3,−6).

.

.

Solution

Differentiate: 2ydydx

= 3x2 + 2x, sodydx

=3x2 + 2x

2y, and

dydx

∣∣∣∣(3,−6)

=3 · 32 + 2 · 3

2(−6)= −33

12= −11

4.

Thus the equation of the tangent line is y+ 6 = −114(x− 3).

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 13 / 34

Page 39: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Finding tangent lines with implicit differentitiation.

.

Example

Find the equation of the linetangent to the curve

y2 = x2(x+ 1) = x3 + x2

at the point (3,−6).

.

.

Solution

Differentiate: 2ydydx

= 3x2 + 2x, sodydx

=3x2 + 2x

2y, and

dydx

∣∣∣∣(3,−6)

=3 · 32 + 2 · 3

2(−6)= −33

12= −11

4.

Thus the equation of the tangent line is y+ 6 = −114(x− 3).

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 13 / 34

Page 40: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Finding tangent lines with implicit differentitiation.

.

Example

Find the equation of the linetangent to the curve

y2 = x2(x+ 1) = x3 + x2

at the point (3,−6).

.

.

Solution

Differentiate: 2ydydx

= 3x2 + 2x, sodydx

=3x2 + 2x

2y, and

dydx

∣∣∣∣(3,−6)

=3 · 32 + 2 · 3

2(−6)= −33

12= −11

4.

Thus the equation of the tangent line is y+ 6 = −114(x− 3).

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 13 / 34

Page 41: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Recall: Line equation forms

I slope-intercept formy = mx+ b

where the slope is m and (0,b) is on the line.I point-slope form

y− y0 = m(x− x0)

where the slope is m and (x0, y0) is on the line.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 14 / 34

Page 42: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Horizontal Tangent Lines

Example

Find the horizontal tangent lines to the same curve: y2 = x3 + x2

SolutionWe have to solve these two equations:

..

y2 = x3 + x2

[(x, y) is on the curve].1.

3x2 + 2x2y

= 0

[tangent lineis horizontal]

.2

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 15 / 34

Page 43: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Horizontal Tangent Lines

Example

Find the horizontal tangent lines to the same curve: y2 = x3 + x2

SolutionWe have to solve these two equations:

..

y2 = x3 + x2

[(x, y) is on the curve].1.

3x2 + 2x2y

= 0

[tangent lineis horizontal]

.2

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 15 / 34

Page 44: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Solution, continued

I Solving the second equation gives

3x2 + 2x2y

= 0 =⇒ 3x2 + 2x = 0 =⇒ x(3x+ 2) = 0

(as long as y ̸= 0). So x = 0 or 3x+ 2 = 0.

I Substituting x = 0 into the first equation gives

y2 = 03 + 02 = 0 =⇒ y = 0

which we’ve disallowed. So no horizontal tangents down that road.I Substituting x = −2/3 into the first equation gives

y2 =

(−23

)3+

(−23

)2=

427

=⇒ y = ± 23√3,

so there are two horizontal tangents.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 16 / 34

Page 45: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Solution, continued

I Solving the second equation gives

3x2 + 2x2y

= 0 =⇒ 3x2 + 2x = 0 =⇒ x(3x+ 2) = 0

(as long as y ̸= 0). So x = 0 or 3x+ 2 = 0.

I Substituting x = 0 into the first equation gives

y2 = 03 + 02 = 0 =⇒ y = 0

which we’ve disallowed. So no horizontal tangents down that road.I Substituting x = −2/3 into the first equation gives

y2 =

(−23

)3+

(−23

)2=

427

=⇒ y = ± 23√3,

so there are two horizontal tangents.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 16 / 34

Page 46: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Solution, continued

I Solving the second equation gives

3x2 + 2x2y

= 0 =⇒ 3x2 + 2x = 0 =⇒ x(3x+ 2) = 0

(as long as y ̸= 0). So x = 0 or 3x+ 2 = 0.I Substituting x = 0 into the first equation gives

y2 = 03 + 02 = 0 =⇒ y = 0

which we’ve disallowed. So no horizontal tangents down that road.

I Substituting x = −2/3 into the first equation gives

y2 =

(−23

)3+

(−23

)2=

427

=⇒ y = ± 23√3,

so there are two horizontal tangents.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 16 / 34

Page 47: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Solution, continued

I Solving the second equation gives

3x2 + 2x2y

= 0 =⇒ 3x2 + 2x = 0 =⇒ x(3x+ 2) = 0

(as long as y ̸= 0). So x = 0 or 3x+ 2 = 0.I Substituting x = 0 into the first equation gives

y2 = 03 + 02 = 0 =⇒ y = 0

which we’ve disallowed. So no horizontal tangents down that road.I Substituting x = −2/3 into the first equation gives

y2 =

(−23

)3+

(−23

)2=

427

=⇒ y = ± 23√3,

so there are two horizontal tangents.V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 16 / 34

Page 48: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Horizontal Tangents

..

.(−2

3 ,2

3√3

).

.(−2

3 ,−2

3√3

)

.

.node

..(−1,0)

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 17 / 34

Page 49: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Horizontal Tangents

..

.(−2

3 ,2

3√3

).

.(−2

3 ,−2

3√3

) .

.node

..(−1,0)

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 17 / 34

Page 50: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Example

Find the vertical tangent lines to the same curve: y2 = x3 + x2

Solution

I Tangent lines are vertical whendxdy

= 0.

I Differentiating x implicitly as a function of y gives

2y = 3x2dxdy

+ 2xdxdy

, sodxdy

=2y

3x2 + 2x(notice this is the

reciprocal of dy/dx).I We must solve

.

.y2 = x3 + x2

[(x, y) is onthe curve]

.1.

2y3x2 + 2x

= 0[tangent lineis vertical]

.2

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 18 / 34

Page 51: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Example

Find the vertical tangent lines to the same curve: y2 = x3 + x2

Solution

I Tangent lines are vertical whendxdy

= 0.

I Differentiating x implicitly as a function of y gives

2y = 3x2dxdy

+ 2xdxdy

, sodxdy

=2y

3x2 + 2x(notice this is the

reciprocal of dy/dx).I We must solve

.

.y2 = x3 + x2

[(x, y) is onthe curve]

.1.

2y3x2 + 2x

= 0[tangent lineis vertical]

.2

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 18 / 34

Page 52: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Example

Find the vertical tangent lines to the same curve: y2 = x3 + x2

Solution

I Tangent lines are vertical whendxdy

= 0.

I Differentiating x implicitly as a function of y gives

2y = 3x2dxdy

+ 2xdxdy

, sodxdy

=2y

3x2 + 2x(notice this is the

reciprocal of dy/dx).

I We must solve

.

.y2 = x3 + x2

[(x, y) is onthe curve]

.1.

2y3x2 + 2x

= 0[tangent lineis vertical]

.2

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 18 / 34

Page 53: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Example

Find the vertical tangent lines to the same curve: y2 = x3 + x2

Solution

I Tangent lines are vertical whendxdy

= 0.

I Differentiating x implicitly as a function of y gives

2y = 3x2dxdy

+ 2xdxdy

, sodxdy

=2y

3x2 + 2x(notice this is the

reciprocal of dy/dx).I We must solve

.

.y2 = x3 + x2

[(x, y) is onthe curve]

.1.

2y3x2 + 2x

= 0[tangent lineis vertical]

.2V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 18 / 34

Page 54: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Solution, continued

I Solving the second equation gives

2y3x2 + 2x

= 0 =⇒ 2y = 0 =⇒ y = 0

(as long as 3x2 + 2x ̸= 0).

I Substituting y = 0 into the first equation gives

0 = x3 + x2 = x2(x+ 1)

So x = 0 or x = −1.I x = 0 is not allowed by the first equation, but

dxdy

∣∣∣∣(−1,0)

= 0,

so here is a vertical tangent.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 19 / 34

Page 55: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Solution, continued

I Solving the second equation gives

2y3x2 + 2x

= 0 =⇒ 2y = 0 =⇒ y = 0

(as long as 3x2 + 2x ̸= 0).I Substituting y = 0 into the first equation gives

0 = x3 + x2 = x2(x+ 1)

So x = 0 or x = −1.

I x = 0 is not allowed by the first equation, but

dxdy

∣∣∣∣(−1,0)

= 0,

so here is a vertical tangent.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 19 / 34

Page 56: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Solution, continued

I Solving the second equation gives

2y3x2 + 2x

= 0 =⇒ 2y = 0 =⇒ y = 0

(as long as 3x2 + 2x ̸= 0).I Substituting y = 0 into the first equation gives

0 = x3 + x2 = x2(x+ 1)

So x = 0 or x = −1.I x = 0 is not allowed by the first equation, but

dxdy

∣∣∣∣(−1,0)

= 0,

so here is a vertical tangent.V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 19 / 34

Page 57: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Tangents

..

.(−2

3 ,2

3√3

).

.(−2

3 ,−2

3√3

) .

.node

..(−1,0)

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 20 / 34

Page 58: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Examples

Example

Show that the families of curves

xy = c x2 − y2 = k

are orthogonal, that is, they intersect at right angles.

Solution

I In the first curve, y+ xy′ = 0 =⇒ y′ = −yx

I In the second curve, 2x− 2yy′ = 0 =⇒ y′ =xy

I The product is −1, so the tangent lines are perpendicularwherever they intersect.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 21 / 34

Page 59: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Orthogonal Families of Curves

xy = cx2 − y2 = k . .x

.y

.xy=1

.xy=2

.xy=3

.xy=−1

.xy=−2

.xy=−3

.x2−

y2=1

.x2−

y2=2

.x2−

y2=3

.x2 − y2 = −1

.x2 − y2 = −2

.x2 − y2 = −3

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 22 / 34

Page 60: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Orthogonal Families of Curves

xy = cx2 − y2 = k . .x

.y

.xy=1

.xy=2

.xy=3

.xy=−1

.xy=−2

.xy=−3

.x2−

y2=1

.x2−

y2=2

.x2−

y2=3

.x2 − y2 = −1

.x2 − y2 = −2

.x2 − y2 = −3

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 22 / 34

Page 61: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Orthogonal Families of Curves

xy = cx2 − y2 = k . .x

.y

.xy=1

.xy=2

.xy=3

.xy=−1

.xy=−2

.xy=−3

.x2−

y2=1

.x2−

y2=2

.x2−

y2=3

.x2 − y2 = −1

.x2 − y2 = −2

.x2 − y2 = −3

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 22 / 34

Page 62: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Orthogonal Families of Curves

xy = cx2 − y2 = k . .x

.y

.xy=1

.xy=2

.xy=3

.xy=−1

.xy=−2

.xy=−3

.x2−

y2=1

.x2−

y2=2

.x2−

y2=3

.x2 − y2 = −1

.x2 − y2 = −2

.x2 − y2 = −3

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 22 / 34

Page 63: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Orthogonal Families of Curves

xy = cx2 − y2 = k . .x

.y

.xy=1

.xy=2

.xy=3

.xy=−1

.xy=−2

.xy=−3

.x2−

y2=1

.x2−

y2=2

.x2−

y2=3

.x2 − y2 = −1

.x2 − y2 = −2

.x2 − y2 = −3

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 22 / 34

Page 64: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Orthogonal Families of Curves

xy = cx2 − y2 = k . .x

.y

.xy=1

.xy=2

.xy=3

.xy=−1

.xy=−2

.xy=−3

.x2−

y2=1

.x2−

y2=2

.x2−

y2=3

.x2 − y2 = −1

.x2 − y2 = −2

.x2 − y2 = −3

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 22 / 34

Page 65: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Orthogonal Families of Curves

xy = cx2 − y2 = k . .x

.y

.xy=1

.xy=2

.xy=3

.xy=−1

.xy=−2

.xy=−3

.x2−

y2=1

.x2−

y2=2

.x2−

y2=3

.x2 − y2 = −1

.x2 − y2 = −2

.x2 − y2 = −3

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 22 / 34

Page 66: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Orthogonal Families of Curves

xy = cx2 − y2 = k . .x

.y

.xy=1

.xy=2

.xy=3

.xy=−1

.xy=−2

.xy=−3

.x2−

y2=1

.x2−

y2=2

.x2−

y2=3

.x2 − y2 = −1

.x2 − y2 = −2

.x2 − y2 = −3

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 22 / 34

Page 67: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Orthogonal Families of Curves

xy = cx2 − y2 = k . .x

.y

.xy=1

.xy=2

.xy=3

.xy=−1

.xy=−2

.xy=−3

.x2−

y2=1

.x2−

y2=2

.x2−

y2=3

.x2 − y2 = −1

.x2 − y2 = −2

.x2 − y2 = −3

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 22 / 34

Page 68: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Orthogonal Families of Curves

xy = cx2 − y2 = k . .x

.y

.xy=1

.xy=2

.xy=3

.xy=−1

.xy=−2

.xy=−3

.x2−

y2=1

.x2−

y2=2

.x2−

y2=3

.x2 − y2 = −1

.x2 − y2 = −2

.x2 − y2 = −3

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 22 / 34

Page 69: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Orthogonal Families of Curves

xy = cx2 − y2 = k . .x

.y

.xy=1

.xy=2

.xy=3

.xy=−1

.xy=−2

.xy=−3

.x2−

y2=1

.x2−

y2=2

.x2−

y2=3

.x2 − y2 = −1

.x2 − y2 = −2

.x2 − y2 = −3

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 22 / 34

Page 70: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Orthogonal Families of Curves

xy = cx2 − y2 = k . .x

.y

.xy=1

.xy=2

.xy=3

.xy=−1

.xy=−2

.xy=−3

.x2−

y2=1

.x2−

y2=2

.x2−

y2=3

.x2 − y2 = −1

.x2 − y2 = −2

.x2 − y2 = −3

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 22 / 34

Page 71: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Examples

Example

Show that the families of curves

xy = c x2 − y2 = k

are orthogonal, that is, they intersect at right angles.

Solution

I In the first curve, y+ xy′ = 0 =⇒ y′ = −yx

I In the second curve, 2x− 2yy′ = 0 =⇒ y′ =xy

I The product is −1, so the tangent lines are perpendicularwherever they intersect.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 23 / 34

Page 72: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Examples

Example

Show that the families of curves

xy = c x2 − y2 = k

are orthogonal, that is, they intersect at right angles.

Solution

I In the first curve, y+ xy′ = 0 =⇒ y′ = −yx

I In the second curve, 2x− 2yy′ = 0 =⇒ y′ =xy

I The product is −1, so the tangent lines are perpendicularwherever they intersect.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 23 / 34

Page 73: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Examples

Example

Show that the families of curves

xy = c x2 − y2 = k

are orthogonal, that is, they intersect at right angles.

Solution

I In the first curve, y+ xy′ = 0 =⇒ y′ = −yx

I In the second curve, 2x− 2yy′ = 0 =⇒ y′ =xy

I The product is −1, so the tangent lines are perpendicularwherever they intersect.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 23 / 34

Page 74: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Music Selection

“The Curse of Curves” by Cute is What We Aim ForV63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 24 / 34

Page 75: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Ideal gases

The ideal gas law relatestemperature, pressure, andvolume of a gas:

PV = nRT

(R is a constant, n is theamount of gas in moles)

..Image credit: Scott Beale / Laughing Squid

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 25 / 34

Page 76: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Compressibility

DefinitionThe isothermic compressibility of a fluid is defined by

β = −dVdP

1V

with temperature held constant.

Approximately we have

∆V∆P

≈ dVdP

= −βV =⇒ ∆VV

≈ −β∆P

The smaller the β, the “harder” the fluid.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 26 / 34

Page 77: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Compressibility

DefinitionThe isothermic compressibility of a fluid is defined by

β = −dVdP

1V

with temperature held constant.

Approximately we have

∆V∆P

≈ dVdP

= −βV =⇒ ∆VV

≈ −β∆P

The smaller the β, the “harder” the fluid.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 26 / 34

Page 78: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Compressibility of an ideal gas

Example

Find the isothermic compressibility of an ideal gas.

SolutionIf PV = k (n is constant for our purposes, T is constant because of theword isothermic, and R really is constant), then

dPdP

· V+ PdVdP

= 0 =⇒ dVdP

= −VP

Soβ = −1

V· dVdP

=1P

Compressibility and pressure are inversely related.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 27 / 34

Page 79: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Compressibility of an ideal gas

Example

Find the isothermic compressibility of an ideal gas.

SolutionIf PV = k (n is constant for our purposes, T is constant because of theword isothermic, and R really is constant), then

dPdP

· V+ PdVdP

= 0 =⇒ dVdP

= −VP

Soβ = −1

V· dVdP

=1P

Compressibility and pressure are inversely related.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 27 / 34

Page 80: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Nonideal gassesNot that there's anything wrong with that

Example

The van der Waals equationmakes fewer simplifications:(

P+ an2

V2

)(V− nb) = nRT,

where P is the pressure, V thevolume, T the temperature, nthe number of moles of the gas,R a constant, a is a measure ofattraction between particles ofthe gas, and b a measure ofparticle size.

...Oxygen..H

..H

..Oxygen

..H

..H

..Oxygen ..H

..H

.

.

.Hydrogen bonds

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 28 / 34

Page 81: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Nonideal gassesNot that there's anything wrong with that

Example

The van der Waals equationmakes fewer simplifications:(

P+ an2

V2

)(V− nb) = nRT,

where P is the pressure, V thevolume, T the temperature, nthe number of moles of the gas,R a constant, a is a measure ofattraction between particles ofthe gas, and b a measure ofparticle size.

.

..Wikimedia Commons

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 28 / 34

Page 82: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Compressibility of a van der Waals gas

Differentiating the van der Waals equation by treating V as a functionof P gives (

P+an2

V2

)dVdP

+ (V− bn)(1− 2an2

V3dVdP

)= 0,

so

β = −1VdVdP

=V2(V− nb)

2abn3 − an2V+ PV3

Question

I What if a = b = 0?I Without taking the derivative, what is the sign of

dβdb

?

I Without taking the derivative, what is the sign ofdβda

?

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 29 / 34

Page 83: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Compressibility of a van der Waals gas

Differentiating the van der Waals equation by treating V as a functionof P gives (

P+an2

V2

)dVdP

+ (V− bn)(1− 2an2

V3dVdP

)= 0,

so

β = −1VdVdP

=V2(V− nb)

2abn3 − an2V+ PV3

Question

I What if a = b = 0?I Without taking the derivative, what is the sign of

dβdb

?

I Without taking the derivative, what is the sign ofdβda

?

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 29 / 34

Page 84: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Compressibility of a van der Waals gas

Differentiating the van der Waals equation by treating V as a functionof P gives (

P+an2

V2

)dVdP

+ (V− bn)(1− 2an2

V3dVdP

)= 0,

so

β = −1VdVdP

=V2(V− nb)

2abn3 − an2V+ PV3

Question

I What if a = b = 0?I Without taking the derivative, what is the sign of

dβdb

?

I Without taking the derivative, what is the sign ofdβda

?

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 29 / 34

Page 85: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Compressibility of a van der Waals gas

Differentiating the van der Waals equation by treating V as a functionof P gives (

P+an2

V2

)dVdP

+ (V− bn)(1− 2an2

V3dVdP

)= 0,

so

β = −1VdVdP

=V2(V− nb)

2abn3 − an2V+ PV3

Question

I What if a = b = 0?

I Without taking the derivative, what is the sign ofdβdb

?

I Without taking the derivative, what is the sign ofdβda

?

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 29 / 34

Page 86: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Compressibility of a van der Waals gas

Differentiating the van der Waals equation by treating V as a functionof P gives (

P+an2

V2

)dVdP

+ (V− bn)(1− 2an2

V3dVdP

)= 0,

so

β = −1VdVdP

=V2(V− nb)

2abn3 − an2V+ PV3

Question

I What if a = b = 0?I Without taking the derivative, what is the sign of

dβdb

?

I Without taking the derivative, what is the sign ofdβda

?

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 29 / 34

Page 87: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Compressibility of a van der Waals gas

Differentiating the van der Waals equation by treating V as a functionof P gives (

P+an2

V2

)dVdP

+ (V− bn)(1− 2an2

V3dVdP

)= 0,

so

β = −1VdVdP

=V2(V− nb)

2abn3 − an2V+ PV3

Question

I What if a = b = 0?I Without taking the derivative, what is the sign of

dβdb

?

I Without taking the derivative, what is the sign ofdβda

?

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 29 / 34

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. . . . . .

Nasty derivatives

I

dβdb

= −(2abn3 − an2V+ PV3)(nV2)− (nbV2 − V3)(2an3)(2abn3 − an2V+ PV3)2

= −nV3

(an2 + PV2

)(PV3 + an2(2bn− V)

)2 < 0

Idβda

=n2(bn− V)(2bn− V)V2(PV3 + an2(2bn− V)

)2 > 0

(as long as V > 2nb, and it’s probably true that V ≫ 2nb).

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 30 / 34

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. . . . . .

Outline

The big idea, by example

ExamplesBasic ExamplesVertical and Horizontal TangentsOrthogonal TrajectoriesChemistry

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 31 / 34

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. . . . . .

Using implicit differentiation to find derivatives

Example

Finddydx

if y =√x.

SolutionIf y =

√x, then

y2 = x,

so2y

dydx

= 1 =⇒ dydx

=12y

=1

2√x.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 32 / 34

Page 91: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Using implicit differentiation to find derivatives

Example

Finddydx

if y =√x.

SolutionIf y =

√x, then

y2 = x,

so2y

dydx

= 1 =⇒ dydx

=12y

=1

2√x.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 32 / 34

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. . . . . .

The power rule for rational powers

TheoremIf y = xp/q, where p and q are integers, then y′ =

pqxp/q−1.

Proof.First, raise both sides to the qth power:

y = xp/q =⇒ yq = xp

Now, differentiate implicitly:

qyq−1dydx

= pxp−1 =⇒ dydx

=pq· x

p−1

yq−1

Simplify: yq−1 = x(p/q)(q−1) = xp−p/q so

xp−1

yq−1 =xp−1

xp−p/q = xp−1−(p−p/q) = xp/q−1

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 33 / 34

Page 93: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

The power rule for rational powers

TheoremIf y = xp/q, where p and q are integers, then y′ =

pqxp/q−1.

Proof.First, raise both sides to the qth power:

y = xp/q =⇒ yq = xp

Now, differentiate implicitly:

qyq−1dydx

= pxp−1 =⇒ dydx

=pq· x

p−1

yq−1

Simplify: yq−1 = x(p/q)(q−1) = xp−p/q so

xp−1

yq−1 =xp−1

xp−p/q = xp−1−(p−p/q) = xp/q−1

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 33 / 34

Page 94: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

The power rule for rational powers

TheoremIf y = xp/q, where p and q are integers, then y′ =

pqxp/q−1.

Proof.First, raise both sides to the qth power:

y = xp/q =⇒ yq = xp

Now, differentiate implicitly:

qyq−1dydx

= pxp−1 =⇒ dydx

=pq· x

p−1

yq−1

Simplify: yq−1 = x(p/q)(q−1) = xp−p/q so

xp−1

yq−1 =xp−1

xp−p/q = xp−1−(p−p/q) = xp/q−1

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 33 / 34

Page 95: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

The power rule for rational powers

TheoremIf y = xp/q, where p and q are integers, then y′ =

pqxp/q−1.

Proof.First, raise both sides to the qth power:

y = xp/q =⇒ yq = xp

Now, differentiate implicitly:

qyq−1dydx

= pxp−1 =⇒ dydx

=pq· x

p−1

yq−1

Simplify: yq−1 = x(p/q)(q−1) = xp−p/q so

xp−1

yq−1 =xp−1

xp−p/q = xp−1−(p−p/q) = xp/q−1

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 33 / 34

Page 96: + Follow Lesson 11: Implicit Differentiation (Section 21 slides

. . . . . .

Summary

I Implicit Differentiation allows us to pretend that a relationdescribes a function, since it does, locally, “almost everywhere.”

I The Power Rule was established for powers which are rationalnumbers.

V63.0121.021, Calculus I (NYU) Section 2.6 Implicit Differentiation October 12, 2010 34 / 34