0% found this document useful (0 votes)
217 views

Math 20C Notes

UCSD study guide for Math20C, for Calculus Early Transcendentals, 2nd Edition, Rogawski. THIS IS NOT A CHEAT SHEET, NO TEST ANSWERS, but rather a very helpful study guide.

Uploaded by

LolhiThere
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
217 views

Math 20C Notes

UCSD study guide for Math20C, for Calculus Early Transcendentals, 2nd Edition, Rogawski. THIS IS NOT A CHEAT SHEET, NO TEST ANSWERS, but rather a very helpful study guide.

Uploaded by

LolhiThere
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 2

12.

5
- n denotes a normal vector and p is a point.
- Eq. of planes - n <x,y,z> = n p
- nx(x px) + ny(y py) + nz(z pz) = 0
- nxx + nyy + nzz = px + py + pz ; px + py + pz = ax + by + cz = d
- r(t) = (a, b, c) + t<u, v, w> x = a + ut, y = b + vt, z= c + wt ; parametric eqs in r(t) = r0 + vt
- Given 3 points, P, Q, R, with PQ x PR = n = <nx, ny, nz>, equation of plane is second one above, using coords from either P, Q, R
- If a1, b1, c1 = a2, b2, c2 given a1x + b1x + c1z = d1 and a2x + b2y + c2z = d2, they are parallel no matter the values of d1, d2.
- xy-plane : z = 0, norm = <0, 0, 1> ; xz-plane : y = 0, norm = <0, 1, 0> ; yz-plane : x = 0, norm = <1, 0, 0>
- nn = ||n|| ||n|| cos (if dot product is < 0, obtuse, > 0, acute, = 0, orthogonal)
-Intersection of 2 planes in a line= r(t) = <px, py, pz> + t[norm(a1x + b1x + c1z = d1) x norm(a2x + b2y + c2z = d2)] (cross product)
- determinant for 3x3: minus first, then plus ; I J K, so that I x J = k; k x j = -i
- when solving the system of equations (original two equations) for the points of P, let x, y, or z = 0, given that they work beforehand
-Intersection of a plane and a line: solve for t for parametric equations, plug back into equation for plane

11.1
- Para. Equations for (x a) + (y b) = n, where radius R is n, and (a, b) is the center, is c(t) = (a + R sin t, b + R cos t)
- For an ellipse given (xa
-1
)
2
+ (yb
-1
)
2
= 1, c(t) = (a sin t, b cos t)
- Cycloid generated by a circle of radius R: c(t) = (R(t sin t), R(1 cos t)).
- y = x c(t) = (t, t)

13.1
- Ex: (4 t)i + (2 + 5t)j + (t)k = (4, 2, 0) + t<-1, 5, ->
- Ex: r(t) = <6 + 3 sin(t), 9, 4 + 3 cos(t)>, for any t, y = 9, so circle is contained within y = 9 plane, so radius = 3, center = (6, 9, 4), and in y = 9 plane
- The projection of r(t) onto the xy-plane is <x(t ), y(t ), 0>. The projection onto the xz-plane is <x(t), 0, z(t)>, and the projection onto the yz-plane is <0, y(t ), z(t)>.

13.2
- Integrals and derivatives for vectors are simple, just perform the operations for every single component
- [r1(t) r2(t)+ = [r1(t) r2(t)+ + *r1(t) r2(t)] ; similarly, [r1(t) x r2(t)+ = *r1(t) x r2(t)+ + *r1(t) x r2(t)]
- *r(g(t))+ = g(t)*r(g(t)) ; chain rule
- L(t) = r(t0) + tr(t0) ; parametrization

11.2
- For finding min or max speed, take the square of the speed and use that function instead

13.3

13.5

- If v*a*cos() = 0, then velocity is constant.
- F = ma

14.1 Functions of Two or More Variables
Contour maps: Set function equal to c and put into form y = mx + b, use m to draw out map
Matching graphs: Set x or y = 0 and describe graph along yz or xz-plane, respectively

14.2 Limits and Continuity
Nonexistent limits: If limit along x-axis, lim x 0 f(x, 0), does not equal limit along y-axis, lim y 0 f(0, y), limit does not exist
Polar coordinates: You could set x = r cos and y = r sin , and hence, x + y = r. Note that (x, y) 0 = r 0.

14.3 Partial Derivatives
Rules: Compute fx with y constant, fy with x constant
fxy = partial deriv. of fx w/ respect to y; fyx = partial deriv. of fy w/ respect to x
fxy = fyx, if f(x, y) is continuous; if fxx + fyy = 0, f(x, y) is harmonic

14.4 Differentiability & Tangent Planes
Linearization: L(x, y, z) = f(a, b, c) + fx(a, b, c)(x a) + fy(a, b, c)(y b) + fz(a, b, c)(z c) - three variables
f(a + h, b + k) = f(a, b) + fx(a, b)h + fy(a, b)k - h, k are differences from estimated value
f(x, y) = f(a, b)(x a) + fx(a, b)(x a) + fy(a, b)(y b) - this is equivalent to the 2
nd
equation
Eq. of tangent plane: z = f(a, b) + fx(a, b)(x a) + fy(a, b)(y b)
v = < fx(a, b), fy(a, b), -1> - normal vector to tangent plane
for v parallel to n:
fx(a, b)/nx = fy(a, b)/ny = -1/nz - nx, ny, nz are coordinates to given normal vector n

14.5 Gradient & Directional Derivatives
Gradient (3 vars): f(a,b,c) = <fx(a, b, c), fy(a, b, c), fz(a, b, c)>
Chain rule (paths):
d
/dt f(c(t)) = fc(t) c(t) - note that f(x, y) = f(c(t)) - in other words, plug in for x and y
Direct. derivatives: Du f(a,b) = f(a,b) u - u =
v
/
v
(unit vector of v), dot product
Du f(a,b) = f(a,b) cos - given an angle
Eq. of tangent plane: f(a,b,c) <x a, y b, z c> = 0 - given point P = (a, b, c), dot product

14.6 Chain Rule
Chain rule:
f
/s =
f
/x
x
/s +
f
/y
y
/s +
f
/z
z
/s - given f(x, y, z) = f(x(s, t), y(s, t), z(s, t))
f
/t =
f
/x
x
/t +
f
/y
y
/t +
f
/z
z
/t - f on top means primary derivative with respect to variable in
denominator, s or t on bottom means partial derivative with
respect to variable in numerator
- remember to plug in for x, y, and z at the VERY end, using the given
parameterizations
Implicit diff:
z
/x = -
Fx
/Fz ;
z
/y = -
Fy
/Fz - given f(x,y,z) = 0; capital F denotes partial derivative.

14.7 Optimization
Critical points: Set fx and fy = 0, critical point is P = (a, b), or if fx or fy does not exist within the domain of f(a, b)
All critical points are all combinations of all x and y coordinates
All exponential (e
f(x)
) functions can be ignored completely, as they are always nonzero
Discriminant: D(a, b) = fxx(x,y)fyy(x,y) f
2
xy(x,y)
If: D > 0 and fxx > 0, f(a, b) is a local minimum
D > 0 and fxx < 0, f(a, b) is a local maximum
D < 0, f(a, b) is a saddle point
D = 0, test inconclusive
Boundaries: If boundary is a disk in the form x + y = r, test endpoints for r

14.8 Lagrange Multipliers
Lagrange multiplier: fx = gx and fy = gy - g(x, y) is constraint
Nonzero condition: One may imply x,y 0, if Lagrange equations are undefined there - or if g(0, 0) does not satisfy constraint
If a value can be found for constraint such that f(x, y) is unbounded, then
f(x, y) has no minimum or maximum

Steps: Write out Lagrange equations, solve for in terms of x and y, solve for x and
y using the constraint (plug them into constraint), and calculate critical values

Multiple Integration Methods
Double integration (cylindrical): x = r cos , y = r sin , z = z, r = x + y - refers to circle on xy-plane, 0 2, r = radius
f(r cos , r sin )r dr d
Triple integration (cylindrical): r f(x,y,z) dz dr d
Triple integration (spherical): x = p sin cos , y = p sin sin , z = p cos - refers to angle made with xy-plane to z-axis
p sin f(x,y,z) dp d d
Reversing order of integration: GRAPH ALL BOUNDS FIRST, reverse dx and dy
To find bounds for x and y, smallest and biggest possible values of x and y within domain

You might also like