PaulKraemer
New member
- Joined
- Apr 10, 2011
- Messages
- 45
Hi,
I am stuck on the following implicit differentiation problem:
Suppose that x^3 + xy + y^4 = 19 determines a differentiable function f such that y = f(x). If P(1,2) is a point on the graph of f, use differentials to approximate the ordinate b of the point Q(1.10, b) on the graph.
I used implicit differentiation to find y ' and came up with:
y ' = (-3x^2 - y) / (x + 4y^3)
I then plugged the coordinates of P(1,2) into the above formula for y ' and got -5/33.
I calculated the differential as follows:
dy = y ' dx = (-5/33) * 0.10 = -0.015
I then added dy to the ordinate of P(1,2) to come up with b:
b = 2 - 0.015 = 1.85
The back of the book says the answer is b = 0.015.
I came up with my same answer twice. If anyone can tell me where I am going wrong, I'd really appreciate it.
Thanks in advance,
Paul
I am stuck on the following implicit differentiation problem:
Suppose that x^3 + xy + y^4 = 19 determines a differentiable function f such that y = f(x). If P(1,2) is a point on the graph of f, use differentials to approximate the ordinate b of the point Q(1.10, b) on the graph.
I used implicit differentiation to find y ' and came up with:
y ' = (-3x^2 - y) / (x + 4y^3)
I then plugged the coordinates of P(1,2) into the above formula for y ' and got -5/33.
I calculated the differential as follows:
dy = y ' dx = (-5/33) * 0.10 = -0.015
I then added dy to the ordinate of P(1,2) to come up with b:
b = 2 - 0.015 = 1.85
The back of the book says the answer is b = 0.015.
I came up with my same answer twice. If anyone can tell me where I am going wrong, I'd really appreciate it.
Thanks in advance,
Paul