Captain Sunshine
New member
- Joined
- Apr 22, 2016
- Messages
- 7
Okay, so I've been mulling this one over for a couple of days now, but haven't come to a satisfactory answer. How does one find the derivative of an equation such as y = 3x3x logarithmically?
The answer given is: 9x3x (ln x + 1)
My best attempt was to take the natural log of both sides and solve for the derivative:
ln y = 3 • d/dx 3x ln x
1/y • dy/dx = 3 (3 ln x + 3)
dy/dx = 9 • y (ln x + 1) = 27x3x(ln x + 1)
No good.
I looked around and discovered I could get the correct answer like this:
y = 3 • d/dx e(3x ln x)
(Let u = 3x ln x)
y = 3 • d/dueu d/dx 3x ln x
y = 3 eu (3 ln x + 3)
y = 9x3x (ln x + 1)
Okay, so I have a way of solving this. However, on the worksheet (Question 3: http://cdn.kutasoftware.com/Worksheets/Calc/03 - Logarithmic Differentiation.pdf) the method shown for solving the equation most resembles my failed attempt.
Could someone please point me in the correct direction with this? I'm sure I must be misusing a log property somewhere.
Thanks.
The answer given is: 9x3x (ln x + 1)
My best attempt was to take the natural log of both sides and solve for the derivative:
ln y = 3 • d/dx 3x ln x
1/y • dy/dx = 3 (3 ln x + 3)
dy/dx = 9 • y (ln x + 1) = 27x3x(ln x + 1)
No good.
I looked around and discovered I could get the correct answer like this:
y = 3 • d/dx e(3x ln x)
(Let u = 3x ln x)
y = 3 • d/dueu d/dx 3x ln x
y = 3 eu (3 ln x + 3)
y = 9x3x (ln x + 1)
Okay, so I have a way of solving this. However, on the worksheet (Question 3: http://cdn.kutasoftware.com/Worksheets/Calc/03 - Logarithmic Differentiation.pdf) the method shown for solving the equation most resembles my failed attempt.
Could someone please point me in the correct direction with this? I'm sure I must be misusing a log property somewhere.
Thanks.