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Chain Rule Examples

The document provides two examples demonstrating the use of the chain rule to calculate derivatives of composite functions. 1) It shows calculating the derivative of z=f(g(x))=(2x+1)2+(2x+1) with respect to x both directly and using the chain rule, obtaining the same result. 2) It uses the chain rule to derive the derivative of f(x)=sin(2x) with respect to x as 2cos(2x), by treating it as the composition f(x)=g(h(x)) with g(u)=sin(u) and h(x)=2x. 3) It notes the power rule is a special

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
53 views3 pages

Chain Rule Examples

The document provides two examples demonstrating the use of the chain rule to calculate derivatives of composite functions. 1) It shows calculating the derivative of z=f(g(x))=(2x+1)2+(2x+1) with respect to x both directly and using the chain rule, obtaining the same result. 2) It uses the chain rule to derive the derivative of f(x)=sin(2x) with respect to x as 2cos(2x), by treating it as the composition f(x)=g(h(x)) with g(u)=sin(u) and h(x)=2x. 3) It notes the power rule is a special

Uploaded by

Diom Shrestha
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© © All Rights Reserved
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First example.

We go back to the functions


z = f (y) = y2 + y and y = g(x) = 2x + 1
from the beginning of this section. The composition of these two functions is
z = f (g(x)) = (2x + 1)2 + (2x + 1) = 4x2 + 6x + 2.
We can compute the derivative of this composed function, i.e. the derivative of z with
respect to x in two
ways. First, you simply differentiate the last formula we have:
(28) dz
dx = d(4x2 + 6x + 2)
dx = 8x + 6.
The other approach is to use the chain rule:
dz
dy = d(y2 + y)
dy = 2y + 1,
and
dy
dx = d(2x + 1)
dx = 2.
Hence, by the chain rule one has
(29) dz
dx = dz
dy
dy
dx = (2y + 1) · 2 = 4y + 2.
The two answers (28) and (29) should be the same. Once you remember that y = 2x
+ 1 you see that this is
indeed true:
y = 2x + 1 =⇒ 4y + 2 = 4(2x + 1) + 2 = 8x + 6.
The two computations of dz/dx therefore lead to the same answer. In this example
there was no clear
advantage in using the chain rule. The chain rule becomes useful when the
functions f and g become more
complicated.
2 Briefly, you have to show that the function
h(y) =
{
{f (y) − f (g(a))}/(y − g(a)) y 6 = a
f ′(g(a)) y = a
is continuous.
5

Example where you really need the Chain Rule. We know what the derivative of sin
x with
respect to x is, but none of the rules we have found so far tell us how to differentiate
f (x) = sin(2x).
The function f (x) = sin 2x is the composition of two simpler functions, namely
f (x) = g(h(x)) where g(u) = sin u and h(x) = 2x.
We know how to differentiate each of the two functions g and h:
g′(u) = cos u, h′(x) = 2.
Therefore the chain rule implies that
f ′(x) = g′(h(x))h′(x) = cos(2x) · 2 = 2 cos 2x.
Leibniz would have decomposed the relation y = sin 2x between y and x as
y = sin u, u = 2x
and then computed the derivative of sin 2x with respect to x as follows
d sin 2x
dx
u=2x
= d sin u
dx = d sin u
du · du
dx = cos u · 2 = 2 cos 2x.
13.5. The Power Rule and the Chain Rule. The Power Rule, which says that for any
function f
and any rational number n one has
d
dx
(f (x)n) = nf (x)n−1f ′(x),
is a special case of the Chain Rule, for one can regard y = f (x) n as the composition
of two functions
y = g(u), u = f (x)
where g(u) = un. Since g′(u) = nun−1 the Chain Rule implies that
dun
dx = dun
du · du
dx = nun−1 du
dx .
Setting u = f (x) and du
dx = f ′(x) then gives you the Power Rule.
13.6. The volume of an inflating balloon. Consider the “real world example” from
page 53 again.
There we considered a growing water balloon of radius
r = f (t).
The volume of this balloon is
V=4
3 πr3 = 4
3 πf (t)3.
We can regard this as the composition of two functions, V = g(r) = 4
3 πr3 and r = f (t).
According to the chain rule the rate of change of the volume with time is now
dV
dt = dV
dr
dr
dt
i.e. it is the product of the rate of change of the volume with the radius of the balloon
and the rate of change
of the balloon’s radius with time. From
dV
dr = d 4
3 πr3
dr = 4πr2
we see that dV
dr = 4πr2 dr
dt .
For instance, if the radius of the balloon is growing at 0.5inch/sec , and if its radius is
r = 3.0inch , then the
volume is growing at a rate of
dV
dt = 4π(3.0inch)2 × 0.5inch/sec ≈ 57inch3/sec.

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