Asked by Nurcan
find y" by implicit differentiation.
4x^3 + 3y^3 = 4
=====================================
4x^3 + 3y^3 = 4
12x + 9yy' = 0
24x + 9(2yy')y' + 9y^2(y") = 0
y" = -6[4x-3y(y')^2] answer. (it this right? )
Answers
Answered by
Reiny
Your 1st deriv should have been
12x^2 + 9y^2 y' = 0 ----> y' = -12x^2/(9y^2)
2nd derivative:
24x + 9y^2 (y'') + y' (18y) = 0
replacing y'
24x + 9y^2 y'' + (-12x^2)/(9y^2) (18y) = 0
24x + 9y^2 y'' - 24x/y = 0
times y
24xy + 9y^3 - 24x = 0
y'' = (24x - 24xy)/(9y^3) = (8x-8xy)/(3y^3)
I don't think they wanted to see that y' in your answer.
btw, how did you ever get you first derivative ?
12x^2 + 9y^2 y' = 0 ----> y' = -12x^2/(9y^2)
2nd derivative:
24x + 9y^2 (y'') + y' (18y) = 0
replacing y'
24x + 9y^2 y'' + (-12x^2)/(9y^2) (18y) = 0
24x + 9y^2 y'' - 24x/y = 0
times y
24xy + 9y^3 - 24x = 0
y'' = (24x - 24xy)/(9y^3) = (8x-8xy)/(3y^3)
I don't think they wanted to see that y' in your answer.
btw, how did you ever get you first derivative ?
There are no AI answers yet. The ability to request AI answers is coming soon!
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.