I see
y = (2x+1)(x-2)^.5 / [(x-3)^(2/3)]
There are many ways to do this to find dy/dx
one is to use the quotient rule and just slug it out.
If you know logs, there is a nice way:
using the rules of logs we get
ln y = (1/2)ln(x-2) + ln(2x+1) - (2/3)ln(x-3)
then (dy/dx) / y = 1/(2(x-2)) + 2/(2x+1) - 2/[3(x-3)]
multiply both sides by y, replacing y with the orignal function on the right side, and you have dy/dx
How do you find the derivative of (x-2)^.5 times (2x+1) times (x-3)^-.666666667? What is the final answer as well?
1 answer