1 00:00:00,110 --> 00:00:02,320 The following content was created under a Creative 2 00:00:02,320 --> 00:00:03,660 Commons License. 3 00:00:03,660 --> 00:00:05,930 Your support will help MIT OpenCourseWare 4 00:00:05,930 --> 00:00:09,970 continue to offer high quality educational resources for free. 5 00:00:09,970 --> 00:00:12,560 To make a donation or to view additional materials 6 00:00:12,560 --> 00:00:16,150 from hundreds of MIT courses, visit MIT OpenCourseWare 7 00:00:16,150 --> 00:00:19,350 at ocw.mit.edu. 8 00:00:19,350 --> 00:00:24,720 Professor: So, we're ready to begin the fifth lecture. 9 00:00:24,720 --> 00:00:25,790 I'm glad to be back. 10 00:00:25,790 --> 00:00:33,240 Thank you for entertaining my colleague, Haynes Miller. 11 00:00:33,240 --> 00:00:35,600 So, today we're going to continue 12 00:00:35,600 --> 00:00:40,740 where he started, namely what he talked about was the chain 13 00:00:40,740 --> 00:00:43,690 rule, which is probably the most powerful technique 14 00:00:43,690 --> 00:00:45,860 for extending the kinds of functions 15 00:00:45,860 --> 00:00:47,650 that you can differentiate. 16 00:00:47,650 --> 00:00:50,920 And we're going to use the chain rule in some rather clever 17 00:00:50,920 --> 00:00:54,410 algebraic ways today. 18 00:00:54,410 --> 00:00:57,420 So the topic for today is what's known 19 00:00:57,420 --> 00:01:10,670 as implicit differentiation. 20 00:01:10,670 --> 00:01:15,040 So implicit differentiation is a technique 21 00:01:15,040 --> 00:01:17,690 that allows you to differentiate a lot of functions you didn't 22 00:01:17,690 --> 00:01:20,970 even know how to find before. 23 00:01:20,970 --> 00:01:24,940 And it's a technique - let's wait for a few people 24 00:01:24,940 --> 00:01:28,260 to sit down here. 25 00:01:28,260 --> 00:01:29,210 Physics, huh? 26 00:01:29,210 --> 00:01:36,419 Okay, more Physics. 27 00:01:36,419 --> 00:01:37,210 Let's take a break. 28 00:01:37,210 --> 00:01:40,980 You can get those after class. 29 00:01:40,980 --> 00:01:46,220 All right, so we're talking about implicit differentiation, 30 00:01:46,220 --> 00:01:53,760 and I'm going to illustrate it by several examples. 31 00:01:53,760 --> 00:01:57,610 So this is one of the most important and basic formulas 32 00:01:57,610 --> 00:01:59,770 that we've already covered part way. 33 00:01:59,770 --> 00:02:06,950 Namely, the derivative of x to a power is ax^(a-1). 34 00:02:06,950 --> 00:02:15,780 Now, what we've got so far is the exponents, 0, plus or minus 35 00:02:15,780 --> 00:02:19,010 1, plus or minus 2, etc. 36 00:02:19,010 --> 00:02:24,440 You did the positive integer powers in the first lecture, 37 00:02:24,440 --> 00:02:30,710 and then yesterday Professor Miller 38 00:02:30,710 --> 00:02:32,470 told you about the negative powers. 39 00:02:32,470 --> 00:02:35,470 So what we're going to do right now, 40 00:02:35,470 --> 00:02:39,500 today, is we're going to consider 41 00:02:39,500 --> 00:02:44,420 the exponents which are rational numbers, ratios of integers. 42 00:02:44,420 --> 00:02:46,540 So a is m/n. 43 00:02:46,540 --> 00:02:53,380 m and n are integers. 44 00:02:53,380 --> 00:02:55,414 All right, so that's our goal for right now, 45 00:02:55,414 --> 00:02:56,830 and we're going to use this method 46 00:02:56,830 --> 00:02:58,150 of implicit differentiation. 47 00:02:58,150 --> 00:03:01,010 In particular, it's important to realize that this 48 00:03:01,010 --> 00:03:03,260 covers the case m = 1. 49 00:03:03,260 --> 00:03:04,890 And those are the nth roots. 50 00:03:04,890 --> 00:03:07,370 So when we take the one over n power, 51 00:03:07,370 --> 00:03:09,680 we're going to cover that right now, 52 00:03:09,680 --> 00:03:13,110 along with many other examples. 53 00:03:13,110 --> 00:03:16,360 So this is our first example. 54 00:03:16,360 --> 00:03:17,700 So how do we get started? 55 00:03:17,700 --> 00:03:20,510 Well we just write down a formula for the function. 56 00:03:20,510 --> 00:03:24,620 The function is y = x^(m/n). 57 00:03:24,620 --> 00:03:26,620 That's what we're trying to deal with. 58 00:03:26,620 --> 00:03:30,610 And now there's really only two steps. 59 00:03:30,610 --> 00:03:38,120 The first step is to take this equation to the nth power, 60 00:03:38,120 --> 00:03:42,900 so write it y^n = x^m. 61 00:03:42,900 --> 00:03:46,170 Alright, so that's just the same equation re-written. 62 00:03:46,170 --> 00:03:50,180 And now, what we're going to do is 63 00:03:50,180 --> 00:03:52,170 we're going to differentiate. 64 00:03:52,170 --> 00:04:01,600 So we're going to apply d/dx to the equation. 65 00:04:01,600 --> 00:04:05,730 Now why is it that we can apply it to the second equation, not 66 00:04:05,730 --> 00:04:06,670 the first equation? 67 00:04:06,670 --> 00:04:10,220 So maybe I should call these equation 1 and equation 2. 68 00:04:10,220 --> 00:04:13,150 So, the point is, we can apply it to equation 2. 69 00:04:13,150 --> 00:04:17,860 Now, the reason is that we don't know how to differentiate 70 00:04:17,860 --> 00:04:18,860 x^(m/n). 71 00:04:18,860 --> 00:04:21,320 That's something we just don't know yet. 72 00:04:21,320 --> 00:04:24,630 But we do know how to differentiate integer powers. 73 00:04:24,630 --> 00:04:29,080 Those are the things that we took care of before. 74 00:04:29,080 --> 00:04:32,980 So now we're in shape to be able to do the differentiation. 75 00:04:32,980 --> 00:04:34,900 So I'm going to write it out explicitly 76 00:04:34,900 --> 00:04:37,930 over here, without carrying it out just yet. 77 00:04:37,930 --> 00:04:46,460 That's d/dx of y^n = d/dx of x^m. 78 00:04:46,460 --> 00:04:51,920 And now you see this expression here 79 00:04:51,920 --> 00:04:55,020 requires us to do something we couldn't do before yesterday. 80 00:04:55,020 --> 00:04:58,780 Namely, this y is a function of x. 81 00:04:58,780 --> 00:05:01,610 So we have to apply the chain rule here. 82 00:05:01,610 --> 00:05:06,710 So this is the same as - this is by the chain rule now - 83 00:05:06,710 --> 00:05:13,332 d/dy of y^n times dy/dx. 84 00:05:13,332 --> 00:05:15,790 And then, on the right hand side, we can just carry it out. 85 00:05:15,790 --> 00:05:17,280 We know the formula. 86 00:05:17,280 --> 00:05:18,420 It's mx^(m-1). 87 00:05:21,550 --> 00:05:24,960 Right, now this is our scheme. 88 00:05:24,960 --> 00:05:29,360 And you'll see in a minute why we win with this. 89 00:05:29,360 --> 00:05:32,390 So, first of all, there are two factors here. 90 00:05:32,390 --> 00:05:33,870 One of them is unknown. 91 00:05:33,870 --> 00:05:35,870 In fact, it's what we're looking for. 92 00:05:35,870 --> 00:05:38,570 But the other one is going to be a known quantity, 93 00:05:38,570 --> 00:05:40,507 because we know how to differentiate y 94 00:05:40,507 --> 00:05:42,507 to the n with respect to y. 95 00:05:42,507 --> 00:05:44,340 That's the same formula, although the letter 96 00:05:44,340 --> 00:05:46,330 has been changed. 97 00:05:46,330 --> 00:05:53,070 And so this is the same as - I'll write it underneath here - 98 00:05:53,070 --> 00:06:07,040 n y^(n-1) dy/dx = m x^(m-1). 99 00:06:07,040 --> 00:06:14,565 Okay, now comes, if you like, the non-calculus part 100 00:06:14,565 --> 00:06:15,190 of the problem. 101 00:06:15,190 --> 00:06:17,140 Remember the non-calculus part of the problem 102 00:06:17,140 --> 00:06:20,030 is always the messier part of the problem. 103 00:06:20,030 --> 00:06:22,210 So we want to figure out this formula. 104 00:06:22,210 --> 00:06:25,600 This formula, the answer over here, 105 00:06:25,600 --> 00:06:29,850 which maybe I'll put in a box now, 106 00:06:29,850 --> 00:06:33,420 has this expressed much more simply, only in terms of x. 107 00:06:33,420 --> 00:06:36,140 And what we have to do now is just solve for dy/dx 108 00:06:36,140 --> 00:06:39,730 using algebra, and then solve all the way in terms of x. 109 00:06:39,730 --> 00:06:41,700 So, first of all, we solve for dy/dx. 110 00:06:44,230 --> 00:06:47,930 So I do that by dividing the factor on the left-hand side. 111 00:06:47,930 --> 00:06:52,960 So I get here mx^(m-1) divided by ny^(n-1). 112 00:06:56,030 --> 00:07:02,020 And now I'm going to plug in-- so I'll write this as m/n. 113 00:07:02,020 --> 00:07:04,540 This is x^(m-1). 114 00:07:04,540 --> 00:07:10,540 Now over here I'm going to put in for y, x^(m/n) times n-1. 115 00:07:15,690 --> 00:07:18,700 So now we're almost done, but unfortunately we 116 00:07:18,700 --> 00:07:22,070 have this mess of exponents that we have to work out. 117 00:07:22,070 --> 00:07:25,060 I'm going to write it one more time. 118 00:07:25,060 --> 00:07:28,584 So I already recognize the factor a out front. 119 00:07:28,584 --> 00:07:30,250 That's not going to be a problem for me, 120 00:07:30,250 --> 00:07:31,980 and that's what I'm aiming for here. 121 00:07:31,980 --> 00:07:34,700 But now I have to encode all of these powers, 122 00:07:34,700 --> 00:07:36,390 so let's just write it. 123 00:07:36,390 --> 00:07:41,790 It's m-1, and then it's minus the quantity (n-1) m/n. 124 00:07:46,270 --> 00:07:50,250 All right, so that's the law of exponents applied to this ratio 125 00:07:50,250 --> 00:07:50,750 here. 126 00:07:50,750 --> 00:07:58,410 And then we'll do the arithmetic over here on the next board. 127 00:07:58,410 --> 00:08:08,700 So we have here m - 1 - (n-1) m/n = m - 1. 128 00:08:08,700 --> 00:08:12,460 And if I multiply n by this, I get -m. 129 00:08:12,460 --> 00:08:15,560 And if the second factor is minus minus, that's a plus. 130 00:08:15,560 --> 00:08:18,220 And that's +m/n. 131 00:08:18,220 --> 00:08:21,080 Altogether the two m's cancel. 132 00:08:21,080 --> 00:08:23,740 I have here -1 + m/n. 133 00:08:23,740 --> 00:08:27,492 And lo and behold that's the same thing as a - 1, 134 00:08:27,492 --> 00:08:29,510 just what we wanted. 135 00:08:29,510 --> 00:08:31,900 All right, so this equals a x^(n-1). 136 00:08:31,900 --> 00:08:39,560 Okay, again just a bunch of arithmetic. 137 00:08:39,560 --> 00:08:42,530 From this point forward, from this substitution 138 00:08:42,530 --> 00:08:51,180 on, it's just the arithmetic of exponents. 139 00:08:51,180 --> 00:08:58,000 All right, so we've done our first example here. 140 00:08:58,000 --> 00:09:00,590 I want to give you a couple more examples, 141 00:09:00,590 --> 00:09:04,030 so let's just continue. 142 00:09:04,030 --> 00:09:08,720 The next example I'll keep relatively simple. 143 00:09:08,720 --> 00:09:15,590 So we have example two, which is going to be the function x^2 + 144 00:09:15,590 --> 00:09:18,060 y^2 = 1. 145 00:09:18,060 --> 00:09:21,200 Well, that's not really a function. 146 00:09:21,200 --> 00:09:29,180 It's a way of defining y as a function of x implicitly. 147 00:09:29,180 --> 00:09:34,700 There's the idea that I could solve for y if I wanted to. 148 00:09:34,700 --> 00:09:36,490 And indeed let's do that. 149 00:09:36,490 --> 00:09:42,490 So if you solve for y here, what happens is you get y^2 = 1 - 150 00:09:42,490 --> 00:09:47,380 x^2, and y is equal to plus or minus the square root of 1 - 151 00:09:47,380 --> 00:09:52,940 x^2. 152 00:09:52,940 --> 00:09:58,200 So this, if you like, is the implicit definition. 153 00:09:58,200 --> 00:10:00,910 And here is the explicit function y, 154 00:10:00,910 --> 00:10:04,140 which is a function of x. 155 00:10:04,140 --> 00:10:06,360 And now just for my own convenience, 156 00:10:06,360 --> 00:10:09,310 I'm just going to take the positive branch. 157 00:10:09,310 --> 00:10:13,450 This is the function. 158 00:10:13,450 --> 00:10:15,900 It's just really a circle in disguise. 159 00:10:15,900 --> 00:10:19,600 And I'm just going to take the top part of the circle, 160 00:10:19,600 --> 00:10:24,920 so we'll take that top hump here. 161 00:10:24,920 --> 00:10:27,900 All right, so that means I'm erasing this minus sign. 162 00:10:27,900 --> 00:10:35,660 I'm just taking the positive branch, just 163 00:10:35,660 --> 00:10:36,470 for my convenience. 164 00:10:36,470 --> 00:10:40,980 I could do it just as well with the negative branch. 165 00:10:40,980 --> 00:10:46,000 Alright, so now I've taken the solution, 166 00:10:46,000 --> 00:10:49,540 and I can differentiate with this. 167 00:10:49,540 --> 00:10:53,070 So rather than using the dy/dx notation over here, 168 00:10:53,070 --> 00:10:55,510 I'm going to switch notations over here, 169 00:10:55,510 --> 00:10:56,620 because it's less writing. 170 00:10:56,620 --> 00:10:59,670 I'm going to write y' and change notations. 171 00:10:59,670 --> 00:11:04,450 Okay, so I want to take the derivative of this. 172 00:11:04,450 --> 00:11:11,570 Well this is a somewhat complicated function here. 173 00:11:11,570 --> 00:11:15,770 It's the square root of 1 - x^2, and the right way always 174 00:11:15,770 --> 00:11:21,720 to look at functions like this is to rewrite them using 175 00:11:21,720 --> 00:11:26,210 the fractional power notation. 176 00:11:26,210 --> 00:11:28,910 That's the first step in computing 177 00:11:28,910 --> 00:11:32,600 a derivative of a square root. 178 00:11:32,600 --> 00:11:38,030 And then the second step here is what? 179 00:11:38,030 --> 00:11:40,740 Does somebody want to tell me? 180 00:11:40,740 --> 00:11:43,650 Chain rule, right. 181 00:11:43,650 --> 00:11:44,300 That's it. 182 00:11:44,300 --> 00:11:45,320 So we have two things. 183 00:11:45,320 --> 00:11:47,720 We start with one, and then we do something else to it. 184 00:11:47,720 --> 00:11:50,090 So whenever we do two things to something, 185 00:11:50,090 --> 00:11:52,020 we need to apply the chain rule. 186 00:11:52,020 --> 00:11:55,240 So 1 - x^2, square root. 187 00:11:55,240 --> 00:11:57,180 All right, so how do we do that? 188 00:11:57,180 --> 00:11:58,830 Well, the first factor I claim is 189 00:11:58,830 --> 00:12:01,220 the derivative of this thing. 190 00:12:01,220 --> 00:12:06,500 So this is 1/2 blah to the -1/2. 191 00:12:06,500 --> 00:12:09,760 So I'm doing this kind of by the advanced method 192 00:12:09,760 --> 00:12:11,390 now, because we've already graduated. 193 00:12:11,390 --> 00:12:14,450 You already did the chain rule last time. 194 00:12:14,450 --> 00:12:15,920 So what does this mean? 195 00:12:15,920 --> 00:12:20,940 This is an abbreviation for the derivative with respect 196 00:12:20,940 --> 00:12:27,697 to blah of blah ^ 1/2, whatever it is. 197 00:12:27,697 --> 00:12:30,280 All right, so that's the first factor that we're going to use. 198 00:12:30,280 --> 00:12:34,480 Rather than actually write out a variable for it 199 00:12:34,480 --> 00:12:36,890 and pass through as I did previously 200 00:12:36,890 --> 00:12:39,160 with this y and x variable here, I'm 201 00:12:39,160 --> 00:12:41,840 just going to skip that step and let 202 00:12:41,840 --> 00:12:45,370 you imagine it as being a placeholder for that variable 203 00:12:45,370 --> 00:12:45,870 here. 204 00:12:45,870 --> 00:12:48,960 So this variable is now parenthesis. 205 00:12:48,960 --> 00:12:52,370 And then I have to multiply that by the rate of change of what's 206 00:12:52,370 --> 00:12:55,050 inside with respect to x. 207 00:12:55,050 --> 00:12:58,580 And that is going to be -2x. 208 00:12:58,580 --> 00:13:02,830 The derivative of 1 - x^2 is -2x. 209 00:13:02,830 --> 00:13:09,030 And now again, we couldn't have done this example two 210 00:13:09,030 --> 00:13:11,730 before example one, because we needed 211 00:13:11,730 --> 00:13:17,470 to know that the power rule worked not just for a integer 212 00:13:17,470 --> 00:13:19,690 but also for a = 1/2. 213 00:13:19,690 --> 00:13:22,740 We're using the case a = 1/2 right here. 214 00:13:22,740 --> 00:13:29,540 It's 1/2 times, and this -1/2 here is a-1. - 215 00:13:29,540 --> 00:13:33,430 So this is the case a = 1/2. 216 00:13:33,430 --> 00:13:39,790 a-1 happens to be -1/2. 217 00:13:39,790 --> 00:13:41,940 Okay, so I'm putting all those things together. 218 00:13:41,940 --> 00:13:44,380 And you know within a week you have 219 00:13:44,380 --> 00:13:45,970 to be doing this very automatically. 220 00:13:45,970 --> 00:13:47,900 So we're going to do it at this speed now. 221 00:13:47,900 --> 00:13:49,780 You want to do it even faster, ultimately. 222 00:13:49,780 --> 00:13:50,280 Yes? 223 00:13:50,280 --> 00:13:53,630 Student: [INAUDIBLE] 224 00:13:53,630 --> 00:13:56,110 Professor: The question is could I have done it implicitly 225 00:13:56,110 --> 00:13:58,060 without the square roots. 226 00:13:58,060 --> 00:13:59,440 And the answer is yes. 227 00:13:59,440 --> 00:14:02,040 That's what I'm about to do. 228 00:14:02,040 --> 00:14:04,570 So this is an illustration of what's 229 00:14:04,570 --> 00:14:07,430 called the explicit solution. 230 00:14:07,430 --> 00:14:13,800 So this guy is what's called explicit. 231 00:14:13,800 --> 00:14:17,024 And I want to contrast it with the method 232 00:14:17,024 --> 00:14:18,440 that we're going to now use today. 233 00:14:18,440 --> 00:14:20,410 So it involves a lot of complications. 234 00:14:20,410 --> 00:14:21,701 It involves the chain rule. 235 00:14:21,701 --> 00:14:23,700 And as we'll see it can get messier and messier. 236 00:14:23,700 --> 00:14:27,260 And then there's the implicit method, 237 00:14:27,260 --> 00:14:29,830 which I claim is easier. 238 00:14:29,830 --> 00:14:36,170 So let's see what happens if you do it implicitly 239 00:14:36,170 --> 00:14:41,010 The implicit method involves, instead of writing 240 00:14:41,010 --> 00:14:43,610 the function in this relatively complicated way, 241 00:14:43,610 --> 00:14:47,380 with the square root, it involves leaving it alone. 242 00:14:47,380 --> 00:14:50,050 Don't do anything to it. 243 00:14:50,050 --> 00:14:52,820 In this previous case, we were left with something which was 244 00:14:52,820 --> 00:14:56,820 complicated, say x^(1/3) or x^(1/2) or something 245 00:14:56,820 --> 00:14:57,370 complicated. 246 00:14:57,370 --> 00:14:59,326 We had to simplify it. 247 00:14:59,326 --> 00:15:01,450 We had an equation one, which was more complicated. 248 00:15:01,450 --> 00:15:03,970 We simplified it then differentiated it. 249 00:15:03,970 --> 00:15:05,590 And so that was a simpler case. 250 00:15:05,590 --> 00:15:09,590 Well here, the simplest thing us to differentiate 251 00:15:09,590 --> 00:15:13,470 is the one we started with, because squares are practically 252 00:15:13,470 --> 00:15:16,725 the easiest thing after first powers, or maybe zeroth powers 253 00:15:16,725 --> 00:15:18,830 to differentiate. 254 00:15:18,830 --> 00:15:19,940 So we're leaving it alone. 255 00:15:19,940 --> 00:15:21,689 This is the simplest possible form for it, 256 00:15:21,689 --> 00:15:23,640 and now we're going to differentiate. 257 00:15:23,640 --> 00:15:24,570 So what happens? 258 00:15:24,570 --> 00:15:26,640 So again what's the method? 259 00:15:26,640 --> 00:15:27,810 Let me remind you. 260 00:15:27,810 --> 00:15:30,210 You're applying d/dx to the equation. 261 00:15:30,210 --> 00:15:33,640 So you have to differentiate the left side of the equation, 262 00:15:33,640 --> 00:15:35,810 and differentiate the right side of the equation. 263 00:15:35,810 --> 00:15:51,100 So it's this, and what you get is 2x + 2yy' is equal to what? 264 00:15:51,100 --> 00:15:52,760 0. 265 00:15:52,760 --> 00:15:56,390 The derivative of 1 0. 266 00:15:56,390 --> 00:15:58,630 So this is the chain rule again. 267 00:15:58,630 --> 00:16:00,390 I did it a different way. 268 00:16:00,390 --> 00:16:02,690 I'm trying to get you used to many different notations 269 00:16:02,690 --> 00:16:04,420 at once. 270 00:16:04,420 --> 00:16:05,350 Well really just two. 271 00:16:05,350 --> 00:16:10,600 Just the prime notation and the dy/dx notation. 272 00:16:10,600 --> 00:16:14,370 And this is what I get. 273 00:16:14,370 --> 00:16:19,670 So now all I have to do is solve for y'. 274 00:16:19,670 --> 00:16:24,270 So that y', if I put the 2x on the other side, is -2x, 275 00:16:24,270 --> 00:16:27,760 and then divide by 2y, which is -x/y. 276 00:16:30,630 --> 00:16:34,600 So let's compare our solutions, and I'll apologize, 277 00:16:34,600 --> 00:16:39,080 I'm going to have to erase something to do that. 278 00:16:39,080 --> 00:16:44,480 So let's compare our two solutions. 279 00:16:44,480 --> 00:16:46,460 I'm going to put this underneath and simplify. 280 00:16:46,460 --> 00:16:48,880 So what was our solution over here? 281 00:16:48,880 --> 00:16:51,500 It was 1/2(1-x^2)^(-1/2) (-2x). 282 00:16:56,720 --> 00:17:02,170 That was what we got over here. 283 00:17:02,170 --> 00:17:06,992 And that is the same thing, if I cancel the 2's, and I change it 284 00:17:06,992 --> 00:17:08,450 back to looking like a square root, 285 00:17:08,450 --> 00:17:11,536 that's the same thing as -x divided by square root of 1 - 286 00:17:11,536 --> 00:17:13,960 x^2. 287 00:17:13,960 --> 00:17:18,380 So this is the formula for the derivative 288 00:17:18,380 --> 00:17:21,340 when I do it the explicit way. 289 00:17:21,340 --> 00:17:29,550 And I'll just compare them, these two expressions here. 290 00:17:29,550 --> 00:17:32,630 And notice they are the same. 291 00:17:32,630 --> 00:17:37,860 They're the same, because y is equal to square root of 1 - 292 00:17:37,860 --> 00:17:40,230 x^2. 293 00:17:40,230 --> 00:17:40,730 Yeah? 294 00:17:40,730 --> 00:17:41,230 Question? 295 00:17:41,230 --> 00:17:46,140 Student: [INAUDIBLE] 296 00:17:46,140 --> 00:17:48,530 Professor: The question is why did the implicit method 297 00:17:48,530 --> 00:17:50,930 not give the bottom half of the circle? 298 00:17:50,930 --> 00:17:53,200 Very good question. 299 00:17:53,200 --> 00:17:57,000 The answer to that is that it did. 300 00:17:57,000 --> 00:17:59,520 I just didn't mention it. 301 00:17:59,520 --> 00:18:00,890 Wait, I'll explain. 302 00:18:00,890 --> 00:18:05,300 So suppose I stuck in a minus sign here. 303 00:18:05,300 --> 00:18:08,040 I would have gotten this with the difference, so 304 00:18:08,040 --> 00:18:10,080 with an extra minus sign. 305 00:18:10,080 --> 00:18:12,480 But then when I compared it to what was over there, 306 00:18:12,480 --> 00:18:15,620 I would have had to have another different minus sign over here. 307 00:18:15,620 --> 00:18:19,310 So actually both places would get an extra minus sign. 308 00:18:19,310 --> 00:18:20,630 And they would still coincide. 309 00:18:20,630 --> 00:18:22,760 So actually the implicit method is a little better. 310 00:18:22,760 --> 00:18:23,940 It doesn't even notice the difference 311 00:18:23,940 --> 00:18:24,940 between the branches. 312 00:18:24,940 --> 00:18:28,930 It does the job on both the top and bottom half. 313 00:18:28,930 --> 00:18:31,390 Another way of saying that is that you're 314 00:18:31,390 --> 00:18:33,200 calculating the slopes here. 315 00:18:33,200 --> 00:18:35,170 So let's look at this picture. 316 00:18:35,170 --> 00:18:36,740 Here's a slope. 317 00:18:36,740 --> 00:18:39,090 Let's just take a look at a positive value 318 00:18:39,090 --> 00:18:42,770 of x and just check the sign to see what's happening. 319 00:18:42,770 --> 00:18:46,982 If you take a positive value of x over here, x is positive. 320 00:18:46,982 --> 00:18:48,190 This denominator is positive. 321 00:18:48,190 --> 00:18:49,106 The slope is negative. 322 00:18:49,106 --> 00:18:52,620 You can see that it's tilting down. 323 00:18:52,620 --> 00:18:53,960 So it's okay. 324 00:18:53,960 --> 00:18:59,520 Now on the bottom side, it's going to be tilting up. 325 00:18:59,520 --> 00:19:01,690 And similarly what's happening up here 326 00:19:01,690 --> 00:19:05,275 is that both x and y are positive, and this x and this y 327 00:19:05,275 --> 00:19:06,167 are positive. 328 00:19:06,167 --> 00:19:07,250 And the slope is negative. 329 00:19:07,250 --> 00:19:10,430 On the other hand, on the bottom side, x is still positive, 330 00:19:10,430 --> 00:19:11,780 but y is negative. 331 00:19:11,780 --> 00:19:15,168 And it's tilting up because the denominator is negative. 332 00:19:15,168 --> 00:19:17,084 The numerator is positive, and this minus sign 333 00:19:17,084 --> 00:19:19,050 has a positive slope. 334 00:19:19,050 --> 00:19:23,330 So it matches perfectly in every category. 335 00:19:23,330 --> 00:19:26,920 This complicated, however, and it's easier 336 00:19:26,920 --> 00:19:30,000 just to keep track of one branch at a time, 337 00:19:30,000 --> 00:19:32,850 even in advanced math. 338 00:19:32,850 --> 00:19:37,590 Okay, so we only do it one branch at a time. 339 00:19:37,590 --> 00:19:43,970 Other questions? 340 00:19:43,970 --> 00:19:47,360 Okay, so now I want to give you a slightly more 341 00:19:47,360 --> 00:19:49,210 complicated example here. 342 00:19:49,210 --> 00:19:52,690 And indeed some of the-- so here's 343 00:19:52,690 --> 00:19:54,490 a little more complicated example. 344 00:19:54,490 --> 00:19:56,900 It's not going to be the most complicated example, 345 00:19:56,900 --> 00:20:17,980 but you know it'll be a little tricky. 346 00:20:17,980 --> 00:20:22,520 So this example, I'm going to give you a fourth order 347 00:20:22,520 --> 00:20:23,020 equation. 348 00:20:23,020 --> 00:20:31,980 So y^4 + xy^2 - 2 = 0. 349 00:20:31,980 --> 00:20:35,320 Now it just so happens that there's 350 00:20:35,320 --> 00:20:38,700 a trick to solving this equation, 351 00:20:38,700 --> 00:20:41,420 so actually you can do both the explicit method 352 00:20:41,420 --> 00:20:46,210 and the non-explicit method. 353 00:20:46,210 --> 00:20:50,379 So the explicit method would say okay well, 354 00:20:50,379 --> 00:20:51,420 I want to solve for this. 355 00:20:51,420 --> 00:20:55,760 So I'm going to use the quadratic formula, but on y^2. 356 00:20:55,760 --> 00:20:59,230 This is quadratic in y^2, because there's a fourth power 357 00:20:59,230 --> 00:21:02,891 and a second power, and the first and third powers are 358 00:21:02,891 --> 00:21:03,390 missing. 359 00:21:03,390 --> 00:21:09,940 So this is y^2 is equal to -x plus or minus the square root 360 00:21:09,940 --> 00:21:19,570 of x^2 - 4(-2) divided by 2. 361 00:21:19,570 --> 00:21:22,790 And so this x is the b. 362 00:21:22,790 --> 00:21:29,750 This -2 is the c, and a = 1 in the quadratic formula. 363 00:21:29,750 --> 00:21:37,200 And so the formula for y is plus or minus the square root of -x 364 00:21:37,200 --> 00:21:45,070 plus or minus the square root x^2 + 8 divided by 2. 365 00:21:45,070 --> 00:21:47,880 So now you can see this problem of branches, 366 00:21:47,880 --> 00:21:50,540 this happens actually in a lot of cases, 367 00:21:50,540 --> 00:21:53,066 coming up in an elaborate way. 368 00:21:53,066 --> 00:21:54,690 You have two choices for the sign here. 369 00:21:54,690 --> 00:21:56,610 You have two choices for the sign here. 370 00:21:56,610 --> 00:21:59,410 Conceivably as many as four roots for this equation, 371 00:21:59,410 --> 00:22:02,031 because it's a fourth degree equation. 372 00:22:02,031 --> 00:22:02,780 It's quite a mess. 373 00:22:02,780 --> 00:22:06,000 You should have to check each branch separately. 374 00:22:06,000 --> 00:22:09,180 And this really is that level of complexity, 375 00:22:09,180 --> 00:22:11,750 and in general it's very difficult 376 00:22:11,750 --> 00:22:17,840 to figure out the formulas for quartic equations. 377 00:22:17,840 --> 00:22:21,630 But fortunately we're never going to use them. 378 00:22:21,630 --> 00:22:24,830 That is, we're never going to need those formulas. 379 00:22:24,830 --> 00:22:31,850 So the implicit method is far easier. 380 00:22:31,850 --> 00:22:35,230 The implicit method just says okay I'll 381 00:22:35,230 --> 00:22:38,980 leave the equation in its simplest form. 382 00:22:38,980 --> 00:22:40,520 And now differentiate. 383 00:22:40,520 --> 00:22:47,300 So when I differentiate, I get 4y^3 y' plus - 384 00:22:47,300 --> 00:22:50,920 now here I have to apply the product rule. 385 00:22:50,920 --> 00:22:56,090 So I differentiate the x and the y^2 separately. 386 00:22:56,090 --> 00:22:59,720 First I differentiate with respect to x, so I get y^2. 387 00:22:59,720 --> 00:23:03,220 Then I differentiate with respect to the other factor, 388 00:23:03,220 --> 00:23:04,410 the y^2 factor. 389 00:23:04,410 --> 00:23:08,950 And I get x(2 y y'). 390 00:23:08,950 --> 00:23:10,440 And then the 0 gives me 0. 391 00:23:10,440 --> 00:23:16,100 So minus 0 equals 0. 392 00:23:16,100 --> 00:23:21,970 So there's the implicit differentiation step. 393 00:23:21,970 --> 00:23:26,260 And now I just want to solve for y'. 394 00:23:26,260 --> 00:23:32,570 So I'm going to factor out 4y^3 + 2xy. 395 00:23:32,570 --> 00:23:35,740 That's the factor on y'. 396 00:23:35,740 --> 00:23:39,780 And I'm going to put the y^2 on the other side. 397 00:23:39,780 --> 00:23:43,400 -y^2 over here. 398 00:23:43,400 --> 00:23:55,110 And so the formula for y' is -y^2 divided by 4y^3 + 2xy. 399 00:23:55,110 --> 00:24:01,420 So that's the formula for the solution. 400 00:24:01,420 --> 00:24:06,947 For the slope. 401 00:24:06,947 --> 00:24:07,780 You have a question? 402 00:24:07,780 --> 00:24:16,340 Student: [INAUDIBLE] 403 00:24:16,340 --> 00:24:18,350 Professor: So the question is for the y would 404 00:24:18,350 --> 00:24:22,140 we have to put in what solved for in the explicit equation. 405 00:24:22,140 --> 00:24:24,120 And the answer is absolutely yes. 406 00:24:24,120 --> 00:24:25,280 That's exactly the point. 407 00:24:25,280 --> 00:24:30,950 So this is not a complete solution to a problem. 408 00:24:30,950 --> 00:24:32,710 We started with an implicit equation. 409 00:24:32,710 --> 00:24:33,990 We differentiated. 410 00:24:33,990 --> 00:24:36,660 And we got in the end, also an implicit equation. 411 00:24:36,660 --> 00:24:39,540 It doesn't tell us what y is as a function of x. 412 00:24:39,540 --> 00:24:43,040 You have to go back to this formula 413 00:24:43,040 --> 00:24:45,520 to get the formula for x. 414 00:24:45,520 --> 00:24:49,310 So for example, let me give you an example here. 415 00:24:49,310 --> 00:24:54,660 So this hides a degree of complexity of the problem. 416 00:24:54,660 --> 00:24:58,550 But it's a degree of complexity that we must live with. 417 00:24:58,550 --> 00:25:10,460 So for example, at x = 1, you can see that y = 1 solves. 418 00:25:10,460 --> 00:25:16,750 That happens to be-- solves y^4 + xy^2 - 2 = 0. 419 00:25:16,750 --> 00:25:18,400 That's why I picked the 2 actually, 420 00:25:18,400 --> 00:25:21,000 so it would be 1 + 1 - 2 = 0. 421 00:25:21,000 --> 00:25:23,060 I just wanted to have a convenient solution there 422 00:25:23,060 --> 00:25:25,630 to pull out of my hat at this point. 423 00:25:25,630 --> 00:25:26,670 So I did that. 424 00:25:26,670 --> 00:25:30,250 And so we now know that when x = 1, y = 1. 425 00:25:30,250 --> 00:25:41,740 So at (1, 1) along the curve, the slope is equal to what? 426 00:25:41,740 --> 00:25:52,200 Well, I have to plug in here, -1^2 / (4*1^3 + 2*1*1). 427 00:25:52,200 --> 00:25:54,290 That's just plugging in that formula over there, 428 00:25:54,290 --> 00:25:59,170 which turns out to be -1/6. 429 00:25:59,170 --> 00:26:00,670 So I can get it. 430 00:26:00,670 --> 00:26:13,940 On the other hand, at say x = 2, we're 431 00:26:13,940 --> 00:26:32,890 stuck using this formula star here to find y. 432 00:26:32,890 --> 00:26:37,170 Now, so let me just make two points 433 00:26:37,170 --> 00:26:40,020 about this, which are just philosophical points for you 434 00:26:40,020 --> 00:26:42,420 right now. 435 00:26:42,420 --> 00:26:45,427 The first is, when I promised you 436 00:26:45,427 --> 00:26:47,010 at the beginning of this class that we 437 00:26:47,010 --> 00:26:48,840 were going to be able to differentiate 438 00:26:48,840 --> 00:26:53,230 any function you know, I meant it very literally. 439 00:26:53,230 --> 00:26:56,021 What I meant is if you know the function, 440 00:26:56,021 --> 00:26:58,020 we'll be able give a formula for the derivative. 441 00:26:58,020 --> 00:27:00,210 If you don't know how to find a function, 442 00:27:00,210 --> 00:27:02,490 you'll have a lot of trouble finding the derivative. 443 00:27:02,490 --> 00:27:05,370 So we didn't make any promises that if you 444 00:27:05,370 --> 00:27:06,830 can't find the function you will be 445 00:27:06,830 --> 00:27:09,300 able to find the derivative by some magic. 446 00:27:09,300 --> 00:27:10,450 That will never happen. 447 00:27:10,450 --> 00:27:12,900 And however complex the function is, 448 00:27:12,900 --> 00:27:16,130 a root of a fourth degree polynomial 449 00:27:16,130 --> 00:27:20,300 can be pretty complicated function of the coefficients, 450 00:27:20,300 --> 00:27:23,990 we're stuck with this degree of complexity in the problem. 451 00:27:23,990 --> 00:27:27,220 But the big advantage of his method, notice, 452 00:27:27,220 --> 00:27:29,340 is that although we've had to find star, 453 00:27:29,340 --> 00:27:31,180 we had to find this formula star, 454 00:27:31,180 --> 00:27:34,100 and there are many other ways of doing these things numerically, 455 00:27:34,100 --> 00:27:36,250 by the way, which we'll learn later, 456 00:27:36,250 --> 00:27:39,940 so there's a good method for doing it numerically. 457 00:27:39,940 --> 00:27:43,190 Although we had to find star, we never had to differentiate it. 458 00:27:43,190 --> 00:27:46,080 We had a fast way of getting the slope. 459 00:27:46,080 --> 00:27:48,280 So we had to know what x and y were. 460 00:27:48,280 --> 00:27:50,980 But y' we got by an algebraic formula, 461 00:27:50,980 --> 00:27:54,450 in terms of the values here. 462 00:27:54,450 --> 00:27:57,140 So this is very fast, forgetting the slope, 463 00:27:57,140 --> 00:28:02,382 once you know the point. yes? 464 00:28:02,382 --> 00:28:03,840 Student: What's in the parentheses? 465 00:28:03,840 --> 00:28:06,790 Professor: Sorry, this is-- Well let's see if I can manage this. 466 00:28:06,790 --> 00:28:16,522 Is this the parentheses you're talking about? 467 00:28:16,522 --> 00:28:17,022 Ah, "say". 468 00:28:17,022 --> 00:28:17,310 That says "say". 469 00:28:17,310 --> 00:28:19,185 Well, so maybe I should put commas around it. 470 00:28:19,185 --> 00:28:24,560 But it was S A Y, comma comma, okay? 471 00:28:24,560 --> 00:28:28,900 Well here was at x = 1. 472 00:28:28,900 --> 00:28:33,100 I'm just throwing out a value. 473 00:28:33,100 --> 00:28:34,200 Any other value. 474 00:28:34,200 --> 00:28:36,360 Actually there is one value, my favorite value. 475 00:28:36,360 --> 00:28:39,700 Well this is easy to evaluate right? x = 0, 476 00:28:39,700 --> 00:28:42,610 I can do it there. 477 00:28:42,610 --> 00:28:45,400 That's maybe the only one. 478 00:28:45,400 --> 00:28:55,820 The others are a nuisance. 479 00:28:55,820 --> 00:29:03,750 All right, other questions? 480 00:29:03,750 --> 00:29:06,060 Now we have to do something more here. 481 00:29:06,060 --> 00:29:10,470 So I claimed to you that we could differentiate 482 00:29:10,470 --> 00:29:11,580 all the functions we know. 483 00:29:11,580 --> 00:29:13,220 But really we can learn a tremendous 484 00:29:13,220 --> 00:29:17,910 about functions which are really hard to get at. 485 00:29:17,910 --> 00:29:20,330 So this implicit differentiation method 486 00:29:20,330 --> 00:29:30,750 has one very, very important application 487 00:29:30,750 --> 00:29:38,010 to finding inverse functions, or finding derivatives 488 00:29:38,010 --> 00:29:40,650 of inverse functions. 489 00:29:40,650 --> 00:29:51,790 So let's talk about that next. 490 00:29:51,790 --> 00:29:55,700 So first, maybe we'll just illustrate by an example. 491 00:29:55,700 --> 00:29:59,310 If you have the function y is equal to square root x, 492 00:29:59,310 --> 00:30:04,600 for x positive, then of course this idea 493 00:30:04,600 --> 00:30:07,170 is that we should simplify this equation 494 00:30:07,170 --> 00:30:10,350 and we should square it so we get this somewhat simpler 495 00:30:10,350 --> 00:30:11,860 equation here. 496 00:30:11,860 --> 00:30:14,080 And then we have a notation for this. 497 00:30:14,080 --> 00:30:21,690 If we call f(x) equal to square root of x, and g(y) = x, 498 00:30:21,690 --> 00:30:25,340 this is the reversal of this. 499 00:30:25,340 --> 00:30:33,150 Then the formula for g(y) is that it should be y^2. 500 00:30:33,150 --> 00:30:48,310 And in general, if we start with any old y = f(x), 501 00:30:48,310 --> 00:30:52,700 and we just write down, this is the defining relationship 502 00:30:52,700 --> 00:30:57,050 for a function g, the property that we're saying is that 503 00:30:57,050 --> 00:31:01,040 g(f(x)) has got to bring us back to x. 504 00:31:01,040 --> 00:31:04,620 And we write that in a couple of different ways. 505 00:31:04,620 --> 00:31:08,260 We call g the inverse of f. 506 00:31:08,260 --> 00:31:13,400 And also we call f the inverse of g, 507 00:31:13,400 --> 00:31:15,960 although I'm going to be silent about which variable 508 00:31:15,960 --> 00:31:19,300 I want to use, because people mix them up a little bit, 509 00:31:19,300 --> 00:31:31,540 as we'll be doing when we draw some pictures of this. 510 00:31:31,540 --> 00:31:32,620 So let's see. 511 00:31:32,620 --> 00:31:42,310 Let's draw pictures of both f and f inverse 512 00:31:42,310 --> 00:31:50,260 on the same graph. 513 00:31:50,260 --> 00:32:02,130 So first of all, I'm going to draw the graph of f(x) 514 00:32:02,130 --> 00:32:06,470 = square root of x. 515 00:32:06,470 --> 00:32:11,260 That's some shape like this. 516 00:32:11,260 --> 00:32:16,390 And now, in order to understand what g(y) is, 517 00:32:16,390 --> 00:32:20,030 so let's do the analysis in general, 518 00:32:20,030 --> 00:32:23,420 but then we'll draw it in this particular case. 519 00:32:23,420 --> 00:32:31,780 If you have g(y) = x, that's really 520 00:32:31,780 --> 00:32:34,460 just the same equation right? 521 00:32:34,460 --> 00:32:37,440 This is the equation g(y) = x, that's y^2 = x. 522 00:32:37,440 --> 00:32:40,650 This is y = square root of x, those are the same equations, 523 00:32:40,650 --> 00:32:43,330 it's the same curve. 524 00:32:43,330 --> 00:32:49,807 But suppose now that we wanted to write down what g(x) is. 525 00:32:49,807 --> 00:32:51,890 In other words, we wanted to switch the variables, 526 00:32:51,890 --> 00:32:55,650 so draw them as I said on the same graph with the same x, 527 00:32:55,650 --> 00:32:59,800 and the same y axes. 528 00:32:59,800 --> 00:33:04,340 Then that would be, in effect, trading the roles of x and y. 529 00:33:04,340 --> 00:33:07,670 We have to rename every point on the graph which 530 00:33:07,670 --> 00:33:12,290 is the ordered pair (x, y), and trade it for the opposite one. 531 00:33:12,290 --> 00:33:15,250 And when you exchange x and y, so 532 00:33:15,250 --> 00:33:23,800 to do this, exchange x and y, and when 533 00:33:23,800 --> 00:33:27,030 you do that, graphically what that looks 534 00:33:27,030 --> 00:33:30,440 like is the following: suppose you have a place here, 535 00:33:30,440 --> 00:33:33,580 and this is the x and this is the y, 536 00:33:33,580 --> 00:33:35,030 then you want to trade them. 537 00:33:35,030 --> 00:33:39,620 So you want the y here right? 538 00:33:39,620 --> 00:33:41,360 And the x up there. 539 00:33:41,360 --> 00:33:44,400 It's sort of the opposite place over there. 540 00:33:44,400 --> 00:33:51,130 And that is the place which is directly opposite this point 541 00:33:51,130 --> 00:33:55,790 across the diagonal line x = y. 542 00:33:55,790 --> 00:33:58,410 So you reflect across this or you flip across that. 543 00:33:58,410 --> 00:34:01,120 You get this other shape that looks like that. 544 00:34:01,120 --> 00:34:10,780 Maybe I'll draw it with a colored piece of chalk here. 545 00:34:10,780 --> 00:34:24,090 So this guy here is y = f^(-1)(x). 546 00:34:24,090 --> 00:34:26,224 And indeed, if you look at these graphs, 547 00:34:26,224 --> 00:34:27,390 this one is the square root. 548 00:34:27,390 --> 00:34:34,787 This one happens to be y = x^2. 549 00:34:34,787 --> 00:34:36,370 If you take this one, and you turn it, 550 00:34:36,370 --> 00:34:39,890 you reverse the roles of the x axis and the y axis, 551 00:34:39,890 --> 00:34:43,620 and tilt it on its side. 552 00:34:43,620 --> 00:34:51,150 So that's the picture of what an inverse function is, and now I 553 00:34:51,150 --> 00:34:56,070 want to show you that the method of implicit differentiation 554 00:34:56,070 --> 00:34:59,890 allows us to compute the derivatives 555 00:34:59,890 --> 00:35:03,250 of inverse functions. 556 00:35:03,250 --> 00:35:05,100 So let me just say it in general, 557 00:35:05,100 --> 00:35:07,310 and then I'll carry it out in particular. 558 00:35:07,310 --> 00:35:16,390 So implicit differentiation allows 559 00:35:16,390 --> 00:35:32,880 us to find the derivative of any inverse function, 560 00:35:32,880 --> 00:35:53,380 provided we know the derivative of the function. 561 00:35:53,380 --> 00:35:58,360 So let's do that for what is an example, which 562 00:35:58,360 --> 00:36:02,510 is truly complicated and a little subtle here. 563 00:36:02,510 --> 00:36:04,770 It has a very pretty answer. 564 00:36:04,770 --> 00:36:09,700 So we'll carry out an example here, 565 00:36:09,700 --> 00:36:19,660 which is the function y is equal to the inverse tangent. 566 00:36:19,660 --> 00:36:25,900 So again, for the inverse tangent 567 00:36:25,900 --> 00:36:30,020 all of the things that we're going to do 568 00:36:30,020 --> 00:36:32,360 are going to be based on simplifying 569 00:36:32,360 --> 00:36:36,250 this equation by taking the tangent of both sides. 570 00:36:36,250 --> 00:36:38,260 So, us let me remind you by the way, 571 00:36:38,260 --> 00:36:41,780 the inverse tangent is what's also known as arctangent. 572 00:36:41,780 --> 00:36:45,210 That's just another notation for the same thing. 573 00:36:45,210 --> 00:36:49,770 And what we're going to use to describe 574 00:36:49,770 --> 00:36:55,565 this function is the equation tan y = x. 575 00:36:55,565 --> 00:36:56,940 That's what happens when you take 576 00:36:56,940 --> 00:36:59,110 the tangent of this function. 577 00:36:59,110 --> 00:37:01,690 This is how we're going to figure out 578 00:37:01,690 --> 00:37:19,650 what the function looks like. 579 00:37:19,650 --> 00:37:23,370 So first of all, I want to draw it, 580 00:37:23,370 --> 00:37:26,610 and then we'll do the computation. 581 00:37:26,610 --> 00:37:32,120 So let's make the diagram first. 582 00:37:32,120 --> 00:37:33,630 So I want to do something which is 583 00:37:33,630 --> 00:37:35,879 analogous to what I did over here with the square root 584 00:37:35,879 --> 00:37:38,060 function. 585 00:37:38,060 --> 00:37:43,740 So first of all, I remind you that the tangent function 586 00:37:43,740 --> 00:37:52,850 is defined between two values here, which are pi/2 and -pi/2. 587 00:37:52,850 --> 00:37:55,010 And it starts out at minus infinity 588 00:37:55,010 --> 00:37:58,560 and curves up like this. 589 00:37:58,560 --> 00:38:08,050 So that's the function tan x. 590 00:38:08,050 --> 00:38:11,350 And so the one that we have to sketch 591 00:38:11,350 --> 00:38:14,870 is this one which we get by reflecting this 592 00:38:14,870 --> 00:38:21,780 across the axis. 593 00:38:21,780 --> 00:38:25,150 Well not the axis, the diagonal. 594 00:38:25,150 --> 00:38:33,080 This slope by the way, should be less - a little lower here so 595 00:38:33,080 --> 00:38:37,580 that we can have it going down and up. 596 00:38:37,580 --> 00:38:42,000 So let me show you what it looks like. 597 00:38:42,000 --> 00:38:44,830 On the front, it's going to look a lot like this one. 598 00:38:44,830 --> 00:38:50,620 So this one had curved down, and so the reflection 599 00:38:50,620 --> 00:38:52,480 across the diagonal curved up. 600 00:38:52,480 --> 00:38:54,320 Here this is curving up, so the reflection 601 00:38:54,320 --> 00:38:56,070 is going to curve down. 602 00:38:56,070 --> 00:38:58,760 It's going to look like this. 603 00:38:58,760 --> 00:39:02,360 Maybe I should, sorry, let's use a different color, 604 00:39:02,360 --> 00:39:04,450 because it's reversed from before. 605 00:39:04,450 --> 00:39:10,420 I'll just call it green. 606 00:39:10,420 --> 00:39:15,630 Now, the original curve in the first quadrant 607 00:39:15,630 --> 00:39:17,990 eventually had an asymptote which was straight up. 608 00:39:17,990 --> 00:39:24,090 So this one is going to have an asymptote which is horizontal. 609 00:39:24,090 --> 00:39:27,260 And that level is what? 610 00:39:27,260 --> 00:39:29,950 What's the highest? 611 00:39:29,950 --> 00:39:30,780 It is just pi/2. 612 00:39:33,470 --> 00:39:35,910 Now similarly, the other way, we're 613 00:39:35,910 --> 00:39:40,040 going to do this: and this bottom level 614 00:39:40,040 --> 00:39:42,940 is going to be -pi/2. 615 00:39:42,940 --> 00:39:47,480 So there's the picture of this function. 616 00:39:47,480 --> 00:39:50,300 It's defined for all x. 617 00:39:50,300 --> 00:39:57,530 So this green guy is y = arctan x. 618 00:39:57,530 --> 00:39:59,530 And it's defined all the way from minus infinity 619 00:39:59,530 --> 00:40:05,290 to infinity. 620 00:40:05,290 --> 00:40:11,410 And to use a notation that we had from limit notation 621 00:40:11,410 --> 00:40:21,290 as x goes to infinity, let's say, x is equal to pi/2. 622 00:40:21,290 --> 00:40:24,823 That's an example of one value that's of interest in addition 623 00:40:24,823 --> 00:40:28,250 to the finite values. 624 00:40:28,250 --> 00:40:31,430 Okay, so now the first ingredient 625 00:40:31,430 --> 00:40:34,580 that we're going to need, is we're 626 00:40:34,580 --> 00:40:37,190 going to need the derivative of the tangent function. 627 00:40:37,190 --> 00:40:40,060 So I'm going to recall for you, and maybe you 628 00:40:40,060 --> 00:40:43,180 haven't worked this out yet, but I hope that many of you have, 629 00:40:43,180 --> 00:40:48,790 that if you take the derivative with respect to y of tan y. 630 00:40:48,790 --> 00:40:55,500 So this you do by the quotient rule. 631 00:40:55,500 --> 00:40:59,150 So this is of the form u/v, right? 632 00:40:59,150 --> 00:41:00,630 You use the quotient rule. 633 00:41:00,630 --> 00:41:06,090 So I'm going to get this. 634 00:41:06,090 --> 00:41:09,560 But what you get in the end is some marvelous simplification 635 00:41:09,560 --> 00:41:12,580 that comes out to cos^2 y. 636 00:41:12,580 --> 00:41:14,740 1 over cosine squared. 637 00:41:14,740 --> 00:41:17,460 You can recognize the cosine squared from the fact that you 638 00:41:17,460 --> 00:41:19,240 should get v^2 in the denominator, 639 00:41:19,240 --> 00:41:26,630 and somehow the numerators all cancel and simplifies to 1. 640 00:41:26,630 --> 00:41:32,560 This is also known as secant squared y. 641 00:41:32,560 --> 00:41:38,010 So that something that if you haven't done yet, 642 00:41:38,010 --> 00:41:48,450 you're going to have to do this as an exercise. 643 00:41:48,450 --> 00:41:50,220 So we need that ingredient, and now we're 644 00:41:50,220 --> 00:41:59,180 just going to differentiate our equation. 645 00:41:59,180 --> 00:42:00,540 And what do we get? 646 00:42:00,540 --> 00:42:15,460 We get, again, (d/dy tan y) times dy/dx is equal to 1. 647 00:42:15,460 --> 00:42:22,930 Or, if you like, 1 / cos^2 y times, in the other notation, 648 00:42:22,930 --> 00:42:30,090 y', is equal to 1. 649 00:42:30,090 --> 00:42:35,740 So I've just used the formulas that I just wrote down there. 650 00:42:35,740 --> 00:42:37,860 Now all I have to do is solve for y'. 651 00:42:37,860 --> 00:42:44,060 It's cos^2 y. 652 00:42:44,060 --> 00:42:47,040 Unfortunately, this is not the form 653 00:42:47,040 --> 00:42:49,610 that we ever want to leave these things in. 654 00:42:49,610 --> 00:42:52,180 This is the same problem we had with that ugly square root 655 00:42:52,180 --> 00:42:54,500 expression, or with any of the others. 656 00:42:54,500 --> 00:42:58,070 We want to rewrite in terms of x. 657 00:42:58,070 --> 00:43:05,280 Our original question was what is d/dx of arctan x. 658 00:43:05,280 --> 00:43:08,260 Now so far we have the following answer to that question: 659 00:43:08,260 --> 00:43:15,210 it's cos^2 (arctan x). 660 00:43:15,210 --> 00:43:31,780 Now this is a correct answer, but way too complicated. 661 00:43:31,780 --> 00:43:33,180 Now that doesn't mean that if you 662 00:43:33,180 --> 00:43:35,100 took a random collection of functions, 663 00:43:35,100 --> 00:43:37,560 you wouldn't end up with something this complicated. 664 00:43:37,560 --> 00:43:41,000 But these particular functions, these beautiful circular 665 00:43:41,000 --> 00:43:42,900 functions involved with trigonometry all 666 00:43:42,900 --> 00:43:45,610 have very nice formulas associated with them. 667 00:43:45,610 --> 00:43:48,740 And this simplifies tremendously. 668 00:43:48,740 --> 00:43:50,360 So one of the skills that you need 669 00:43:50,360 --> 00:43:54,660 to develop when you're dealing with trig functions 670 00:43:54,660 --> 00:43:56,690 is to simplify this. 671 00:43:56,690 --> 00:44:03,620 And so let's see now that expressions like this all 672 00:44:03,620 --> 00:44:07,950 simplify. 673 00:44:07,950 --> 00:44:10,400 So here we go. 674 00:44:10,400 --> 00:44:12,264 There's only one formula, one ingredient 675 00:44:12,264 --> 00:44:14,180 that we need to use to do this, and then we're 676 00:44:14,180 --> 00:44:15,460 going to draw a diagram. 677 00:44:15,460 --> 00:44:18,530 So the ingredient again, is the original defining relationship 678 00:44:18,530 --> 00:44:22,150 that tan y = x. 679 00:44:22,150 --> 00:44:27,780 So tan y = x can be encoded in a right triangle 680 00:44:27,780 --> 00:44:34,520 in the following way: here's the right triangle and tan 681 00:44:34,520 --> 00:44:38,590 y means that y should be represented as an angle. 682 00:44:38,590 --> 00:44:40,820 And then, its tangent is the ratio 683 00:44:40,820 --> 00:44:43,500 of this vertical to this horizontal side. 684 00:44:43,500 --> 00:44:46,250 So I'm just going to pick two values that work, 685 00:44:46,250 --> 00:44:48,990 namely x and 1. 686 00:44:48,990 --> 00:44:51,930 Those are the simplest ones. 687 00:44:51,930 --> 00:44:57,670 So I've encoded this equation in this picture. 688 00:44:57,670 --> 00:45:01,560 And now all I have to do is figure out what the cosine of y 689 00:45:01,560 --> 00:45:03,540 is in this right triangle here. 690 00:45:03,540 --> 00:45:06,081 In order to do that, I need to figure out what the hypotenuse 691 00:45:06,081 --> 00:45:13,280 is, but that's just square root of 1 + x^2. 692 00:45:13,280 --> 00:45:18,580 And now I can read off what the cosine of y is. 693 00:45:18,580 --> 00:45:23,560 So the cosine of y is 1 divided by the hypotenuse. 694 00:45:23,560 --> 00:45:32,480 So it's 1 over square root, whoops, yeah, 1 + x^2. 695 00:45:32,480 --> 00:45:39,900 And so cosine squared is just 1 / 1 + x^2. 696 00:45:39,900 --> 00:45:43,050 And so our answer over here, the preferred answer which is way 697 00:45:43,050 --> 00:45:45,670 simpler than what I wrote up there, 698 00:45:45,670 --> 00:46:04,690 is that d/dx of tan inverse x is equal to 1 over 1 + x^2. 699 00:46:04,690 --> 00:46:06,770 Maybe I'll stop here for one more question. 700 00:46:06,770 --> 00:46:10,240 I have one more calculation which I can do even 701 00:46:10,240 --> 00:46:11,500 in less than a minute. 702 00:46:11,500 --> 00:46:16,360 So we have a whole minute for questions. 703 00:46:16,360 --> 00:46:20,480 Yeah? 704 00:46:20,480 --> 00:46:26,620 Student: [INAUDIBLE] 705 00:46:26,620 --> 00:46:34,210 Professor: What happens to the inverse tangent? 706 00:46:34,210 --> 00:46:41,530 The inverse tangent-- Okay, this inverse tangent 707 00:46:41,530 --> 00:46:44,030 is the same as this y here. 708 00:46:44,030 --> 00:46:46,140 Those are the same thing. 709 00:46:46,140 --> 00:46:50,480 So what I did was I skipped this step here entirely. 710 00:46:50,480 --> 00:46:52,070 I never wrote that down. 711 00:46:52,070 --> 00:46:54,560 But the inverse tangent was that y. 712 00:46:54,560 --> 00:46:56,690 The issue was what's a good formula 713 00:46:56,690 --> 00:47:01,080 for cos y in terms of x? 714 00:47:01,080 --> 00:47:04,510 So I am evaluating that, but I'm doing it using the letter y. 715 00:47:04,510 --> 00:47:06,600 So in other words, what happened to the inverse 716 00:47:06,600 --> 00:47:10,350 tangent is that I called it y, which 717 00:47:10,350 --> 00:47:15,340 is what it's been all along. 718 00:47:15,340 --> 00:47:17,450 Okay, so now I'm going to do the case 719 00:47:17,450 --> 00:47:20,400 of the sine, the inverse sine. 720 00:47:20,400 --> 00:47:22,890 And I'll show you how easy this is 721 00:47:22,890 --> 00:47:27,420 if I don't fuss with-- because this one has an easy trig 722 00:47:27,420 --> 00:47:29,760 identity associated with it. 723 00:47:29,760 --> 00:47:37,870 So if y = sin^(-1) x, and sin y = x, 724 00:47:37,870 --> 00:47:40,970 and now watch how simple it is when I do the differentiation. 725 00:47:40,970 --> 00:47:42,440 I just differentiate. 726 00:47:42,440 --> 00:47:50,780 I get (cos y) y' = 1. 727 00:47:50,780 --> 00:48:00,580 And then, y', so that implies that = 1 / cos y, 728 00:48:00,580 --> 00:48:03,080 and now to rewrite that in terms of x, 729 00:48:03,080 --> 00:48:10,550 I have to just recognize that this is the same as this, 730 00:48:10,550 --> 00:48:14,910 which is the same as 1 / square root of 1 - x^2. 731 00:48:14,910 --> 00:48:19,600 So all told, the derivative with respect to x of the arcsine 732 00:48:19,600 --> 00:48:30,420 function is 1 / square root of 1 - x^2. 733 00:48:30,420 --> 00:48:32,540 So these implicit differentiations 734 00:48:32,540 --> 00:48:34,700 are very convenient. 735 00:48:34,700 --> 00:48:38,190 However, I warn you that you do have 736 00:48:38,190 --> 00:48:42,670 to be careful about the range of applicability of these things. 737 00:48:42,670 --> 00:48:44,550 You have to draw a picture like this one 738 00:48:44,550 --> 00:48:47,210 to make sure you know where this makes sense. 739 00:48:47,210 --> 00:48:50,380 In other words, you have to pick a branch for the sine function 740 00:48:50,380 --> 00:48:52,050 to work that out, and there's something 741 00:48:52,050 --> 00:48:53,330 like that on your problem set. 742 00:48:53,330 --> 00:48:56,030 And it's also discussed in your text. 743 00:48:56,030 --> 00:48:58,070 So we'll stop here.