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Lesson 6: The derivative as a function

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The derivative of a function is another function. We look at the interplay between the two. Also, new notations, higher derivatives, and some sweet wigs
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Section 2.8 The Derivative as a Function Math 1a February 13, 2008 Announcements I Office Hours TW 2–4 in SC 323 I ALEKS is due Wednesday 2/20 I HW on website
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Page 1: Lesson 6: The derivative as a function

Section 2.8The Derivative as a Function

Math 1a

February 13, 2008

Announcements

I Office Hours TW 2–4 in SC 323

I ALEKS is due Wednesday 2/20

I HW on website

Page 2: Lesson 6: The derivative as a function

Outline

Cleanup: Derivatives of some root functions

The derivative functionWorksheet #1

How can a function fail to be differentiable?

Other notations

The second derivativeWorksheet #2

Page 3: Lesson 6: The derivative as a function

Last time: Worksheet problems 3 and 4

ProblemLet f (x) = x1/3. Find f ′(x) and its domain.

Answer

f ′(x) =1

3x−2/3. The domain is all numbers except 0.

ProblemLet f (x) = x2/3. Find f ′(x) and its domain.

Answer

f ′(x) =2

3x−1/3. The domain is all numbers except 0.

Page 4: Lesson 6: The derivative as a function

Last time: Worksheet problems 3 and 4

ProblemLet f (x) = x1/3. Find f ′(x) and its domain.

Answer

f ′(x) =1

3x−2/3. The domain is all numbers except 0.

ProblemLet f (x) = x2/3. Find f ′(x) and its domain.

Answer

f ′(x) =2

3x−1/3. The domain is all numbers except 0.

Page 5: Lesson 6: The derivative as a function

Last time: Worksheet problems 3 and 4

ProblemLet f (x) = x1/3. Find f ′(x) and its domain.

Answer

f ′(x) =1

3x−2/3. The domain is all numbers except 0.

ProblemLet f (x) = x2/3. Find f ′(x) and its domain.

Answer

f ′(x) =2

3x−1/3. The domain is all numbers except 0.

Page 6: Lesson 6: The derivative as a function

Outline

Cleanup: Derivatives of some root functions

The derivative functionWorksheet #1

How can a function fail to be differentiable?

Other notations

The second derivativeWorksheet #2

Page 7: Lesson 6: The derivative as a function

The derivative function

I We have snuck this in: If f is a function, we can compute thederivative f ′(x) at each point x where f is differentiable, andcome up with another function, the derivative function.

I What can we say about this function f ′?

Page 8: Lesson 6: The derivative as a function

Worksheet #1

Page 9: Lesson 6: The derivative as a function

Outline

Cleanup: Derivatives of some root functions

The derivative functionWorksheet #1

How can a function fail to be differentiable?

Other notations

The second derivativeWorksheet #2

Page 10: Lesson 6: The derivative as a function

Differentiability is super-continuity

TheoremIf f is differentiable at a, then f is continuous at a.

Proof.We have

limx→a

(f (x) − f (a)) = limx→a

f (x) − f (a)

x − a· (x − a)

= limx→a

f (x) − f (a)

x − a· limx→a

(x − a)

= f ′(a) · 0 = 0

Note the proper use of the limit law: if the factors each have alimit at a, the limit of the product is the product of the limits.

Page 11: Lesson 6: The derivative as a function

Differentiability is super-continuity

TheoremIf f is differentiable at a, then f is continuous at a.

Proof.We have

limx→a

(f (x) − f (a)) = limx→a

f (x) − f (a)

x − a· (x − a)

= limx→a

f (x) − f (a)

x − a· limx→a

(x − a)

= f ′(a) · 0 = 0

Note the proper use of the limit law: if the factors each have alimit at a, the limit of the product is the product of the limits.

Page 12: Lesson 6: The derivative as a function

Differentiability is super-continuity

TheoremIf f is differentiable at a, then f is continuous at a.

Proof.We have

limx→a

(f (x) − f (a)) = limx→a

f (x) − f (a)

x − a· (x − a)

= limx→a

f (x) − f (a)

x − a· limx→a

(x − a)

= f ′(a) · 0 = 0

Note the proper use of the limit law: if the factors each have alimit at a, the limit of the product is the product of the limits.

Page 13: Lesson 6: The derivative as a function

How can a function fail to be differentiable?Kinks

x

f (x)

x

f ′(x)

Page 14: Lesson 6: The derivative as a function

How can a function fail to be differentiable?Kinks

x

f (x)

x

f ′(x)

Page 15: Lesson 6: The derivative as a function

How can a function fail to be differentiable?Cusps

x

f (x)

x

f ′(x)

Page 16: Lesson 6: The derivative as a function

How can a function fail to be differentiable?Cusps

x

f (x)

x

f ′(x)

Page 17: Lesson 6: The derivative as a function

How can a function fail to be differentiable?Vertical Tangents

x

f (x)

x

f ′(x)

Page 18: Lesson 6: The derivative as a function

How can a function fail to be differentiable?Vertical Tangents

x

f (x)

x

f ′(x)

Page 19: Lesson 6: The derivative as a function

How can a function fail to be differentiable?Weird, Wild, Stuff

x

f (x)

x

f ′(x)

Page 20: Lesson 6: The derivative as a function

How can a function fail to be differentiable?Weird, Wild, Stuff

x

f (x)

x

f ′(x)

Page 21: Lesson 6: The derivative as a function

Outline

Cleanup: Derivatives of some root functions

The derivative functionWorksheet #1

How can a function fail to be differentiable?

Other notations

The second derivativeWorksheet #2

Page 22: Lesson 6: The derivative as a function

Notation

I Newtonian notation

f ′(x) y ′(x) y ′

I Leibnizian notation

dy

dx

d

dxf (x)

df

dx

Page 23: Lesson 6: The derivative as a function

Meet the Mathematician: Isaac Newton

I English, 1643–1727

I Professor at Cambridge(England)

I Philosophiae NaturalisPrincipia Mathematicapublished 1687

Page 24: Lesson 6: The derivative as a function

Meet the Mathematician: Gottfried Leibniz

I German, 1646–1716

I Eminent philosopher aswell as mathematician

I Contemporarily disgracedby the calculus prioritydispute

Page 25: Lesson 6: The derivative as a function

Outline

Cleanup: Derivatives of some root functions

The derivative functionWorksheet #1

How can a function fail to be differentiable?

Other notations

The second derivativeWorksheet #2

Page 26: Lesson 6: The derivative as a function

The second derivative

If f is a function, so is f ′, and we can seek its derivative.

f ′′ = (f ′)′

It measures the rate of change of the rate of change!

Leibnizian notation:

d2y

dx2

d2

dx2f (x)

d2f

dx2

Page 27: Lesson 6: The derivative as a function

The second derivative

If f is a function, so is f ′, and we can seek its derivative.

f ′′ = (f ′)′

It measures the rate of change of the rate of change!Leibnizian notation:

d2y

dx2

d2

dx2f (x)

d2f

dx2

Page 28: Lesson 6: The derivative as a function

Worksheet #2


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