Use logarithmic differentiation to find derivative

dubb

New member
Joined
Oct 3, 2014
Messages
28
Hi, I'm still trying to get used to this whole process so its fairly new to me. Can you please help me with breaking this down to get the derivative?

y=(x+x^2)^(sin^2x)

Thanks
 
Hi, I'm still trying to get used to this whole process so its fairly new to me. Can you please help me with breaking this down to get the derivative?

y=(x+x^2)^(sin^2x)

Thanks

As suggested by the title, take logarithm of both sides. What do you get?
 
This is what i get.

Lny = sin^2(x)Ln(x+x^2) not sure what to do next. Chain rule of Ln(x+x^2)?
 
This is what i get.

Lny = sin^2(x) * Ln(x+x^2) not sure what to do next. Chain rule of Ln(x+x^2)?

Now differentiate both sides using chain rule and product rule.
 
I got:
1/y = 2cosxsinxLn(x+x^2) + (2xsine^2(x))/(x+x^2)

does that look right?
 
Top