asked 158k views
2 votes
Can anyone explain this step by step? More specifically this part. I'm working on logarithmic differentiation to find dy/dx of y=square root x(x+2)

Can anyone explain this step by step? More specifically this part. I'm working on-example-1

1 Answer

3 votes

y=√(x(x+2))=\sqrt x√(x+2)=x^(1/2)(x+2)^(1/2)

Take the logarithm of both sides.


\ln y=\ln(x^(1/2)(x+2)^(1/2))=\frac12\ln x+\frac12\ln(x+2)

In the last equality, we used the fact that
\ln(ab)=\ln a+\ln b and
\ln a^c=c\ln a.

Differentiating both sides with respect to
x, we have


\frac1y(\mathrm dy)/(\mathrm dx)=\frac1{2x}+\frac1{2(x+2)}

where the left hand side occurs by the chain rule (recall that
y is a function of
x).

The solution then follows from the steps in your attachment, which is just a matter of algebraic manipulation.
answered
User TheKingPinMirza
by
7.9k points

Related questions

1 answer
0 votes
23.1k views
asked Aug 1, 2024 206k views
Ding Peng asked Aug 1, 2024
by Ding Peng
8.7k points
1 answer
0 votes
206k views
Welcome to Qamnty — a place to ask, share, and grow together. Join our community and get real answers from real people.