ddd9011301d70a8d9681fdb5d0c0380ffc8143db
1# Differential calculus
2
3## Limits
4
5$$\lim_{x \rightarrow a}f(x)$$
6
7$L^-$ - limit from below
8
9$L^+$ - limit from above
10
11$\lim_{x \to a} f(x)$ - limit of a point
12
13- Limit exists if $L^-=L^+$
14- If limit exists, point does not.
15
16Limits can be solved using normal techniques (if div 0, factorise)
17
18## Limit theorems
19
201. For constant function $f(x)=k$, $\lim_{x \rightarrow a} f(x) = k$
212. $\lim_{x \rightarrow a} (f(x) \pm g(x)) = F \pm G$
223. $\lim_{x \rightarrow a} (f(x) \times g(x)) = F \times G$
234. ${\lim_{x \rightarrow a} {f(x) \over g(x)}} = {F \over G}, G \ne 0$
24
25Corollary: $\lim_{x \rightarrow a} c \times f(x)=cF$ where $c=$ constant
26
27## Solving limits for $x\rightarrow\infty$
28
29Factorise so that all values of $x$ are in denominators.
30
31e.g.
32
33$$\lim_{x \rightarrow \infty}{{2x+3} \over {x-2}}={{2+{3 \over x}} \over {1-{2 \over x}}}={2 \over 1} = 2$$
34
35
36## Continuous functions
37
38A function is continuous if $L^-=L^+=f(x)$ for all values of $x$.
39
40## Gradients of secants and tangents
41
42Secant (chord) - line joining two points on curve
43
44Tangent - line that intersects curve at one point
45
46given $P(x,y) \quad Q(x+\delta x, y + \delta y)$:
47gradient of chord joining $P$ and $Q$ is ${m_{PQ}}={\operatorname{rise} \over \operatorname{run}} = {\delta y \over \delta x}$
48
49As $Q \rightarrow P, \delta x \rightarrow 0$. Chord becomes tangent (two infinitesimal points are equal).
50
51Can also be used with functions, where $h=\delta x$.
52
53## First principles derivative
54
55$$f^\prime(x) = \lim_{\delta x \rightarrow 0}{\delta y \over \delta x}={dy \over dx}$$
56
57$$m_{\operatorname{tangent}}=\lim_{h \rightarrow 0}f^\prime(x)$$
58
59
60
61$$m_{\operatorname{chord PQ}}=f^\prime(x)$$
62
63first principles derivative:
64$${m_{\operatorname{tangent at P}} =\lim_{h \rightarrow 0}}{{f(x+h)-f(x)}\over h}$$
65
66## Gradient at a point
67
68Given point $P(a, b)$ and function $f(x)$, the gradient is $f^\prime(a)$
69
70
71## Derivatives of $x^n$
72
73$${d(ax^n) \over dx}=anx^{n-1}$$
74
75If $x=$ constant, derivative is $0$
76
77If $y=ax^n$, derivative is $a\times nx^{n-1}$
78
79If $f(x)={1 \over x}=x^{-1}, \quad f^\prime(x)=-1x^{-2}={-1 \over x^2}$
80
81If $f(x)=^5\sqrt{x}=x^{1 \over 5}, \quad f^\prime(x)={1 \over 5}x^{-4/5}={1 \over 5 \times ^5\sqrt{x^4}}$
82
83If $f(x)=(x-b)^2, \quad f^\prime(x)=2(x-b)$
84
85$$f^\prime(x)=\lim_{h \rightarrow 0}{{f(x+h)-f(x)} \over h}$$
86
87## Derivatives of $u \pm v$
88
89$${dy \over dx}={du \over dx} \pm {dv \over dx}$$
90where $u$ and $v$ are functions of $x$
91
92## Euler's number as a limit
93
94$$\lim_{h \rightarrow 0} {{e^h-1} \over h}=1$$
95
96## Chain rule for $(f\circ g)$
97
98$${dy \over dx} = {dy \over du} \cdot {du \over dx}$$
99$${d((ax+b)^n) \over dx} = {d(ax+b) \over dx} \cdot n \cdot (ax+b)^{n-1}$$
100
101Function notation:
102
103$$(f\circ g)^\prime(x)=f^\prime(g(x))g^\prime(x),\quad \mathbb{where}\hspace{0.3em} (f\circ g)(x)=f(g(x))$$
104
105Used with only one expression.
106
107e.g. $y=(x^2+5)^7$ - Cannot reasonably expand
108Let $u-x^2+5$ (inner expression)
109${du \over dx} = 2x$
110$y=u^7$
111${dy \over du} = 7u^6$
112
113
114$7u^6 \times$
115
116## Product rule for $y=uv$
117
118$${dy \over dx} = u{dv \over dx} + v{du \over dx}$$
119
120Surds can be left on denomintaors.
121
122## Quotient rule for $y={u \over v}$
123
124$${dy \over dx} = {{v{du \over dx} - u{dv \over dx}} \over v^2}$$
125
126If $f(x)={u(x) \over v(x)}$, then $f^\prime(x)={{v(x)u^\prime(x)-u(x)v^\prime(x)} \over [v(x)]^2}$
127
128If $y={u(x) \over v(x)}$, then derivative ${dy \over dx} = {{v{du \over dx} - u{dv \over dx}} \over v^2}$
129
130## Logarithms
131
132$$\log_b (x) = n \quad \operatorname{where} \hspace{0.5em} b^n=x$$
133
134Wikipedia:
135
136> the logarithm of a given number $x$ is the exponent to which another fixed number, the base $b$, must be raised, to produce that number $x$
137
138### Logarithmic identities
139$\log_b (xy)=\log_b x + \log_b y$
140$\log_b x^n = n \log_b x$
141$\log_b y^{x^n} = x^n \log_b y$
142
143### Index identities
144$b^{m+n}=b^m \cdot b^n$
145$(b^m)^n=b^{m \cdot n}$
146$(b \cdot c)^n = b^n \cdot c^n$
147${a^m \div a^n} = {a^{m-n}}$
148
149### $e$ as a logarithm
150
151$$\operatorname{if} y=e^x, \quad \operatorname{then} x=\log_e y$$
152$$\ln x = \log_e x$$
153
154### Differentiating logarithms
155$${d(\log_e x)\over dx} = x^{-1} = {1 \over x}$$
156
157## Solving $e^x$ etc
158
159| $f(x)$ | $f^\prime(x)$ |xs
160| ------ | ------------- |
161| $\sin x$ | $\cos x$ |
162| $\sin ax$ | $a\cos ax$ |
163| $\cos x$ | $-\sin x$ |
164| $\cos ax$ | $-a \sin ax$ |
165| $e^x$ | $e^x$ |
166| $e^{ax}$ | $ae^{ax}$ |
167| $ax^{nx}$ | $an \cdot e^{nx}$ |
168| $\log_e x$ | $1 \over x$ |
169| $\log_e {ax}$ | $1 \over x$ |
170| $\log_e f(x)$ | $f^\prime (x) \over f(x)$ |
171| $\sin(f(x))$ | $f^\prime(x) \cdot \cos(f(x))$ |
172
173<!-- $${d(ax^{nx}) \over dx} = an \cdot e^nx$$ -->
174
175## Antidifferentiation
176
177$$y={x^{n+1} \over n+1} + c$$
178
179## Integration
180
181$$\int f(x) dx = F(x) + c$$
182
183- area enclosed by curves
184- $+c$ should be shown on each step without $\int$
185
186$$\int x^n = {x^{n+1} \over n+1} + c$$
187
188### Integral laws
189
190$\int f(x) + g(x) dx = \int f(x) dx + \int g(x) dx$
191$\int k f(x) dx = k \int f(x) dx$
192
193| $f(x)$ | $\int f(x) \cdot dx$ |
194| ------------------------------- | ---------------------------- |
195| $k$ (constant) | $kx + c$ |
196| $x^n$ | ${1 \over {n+1}}x^{n+1} + c$ |
197| $a x^{-n}$ | $a \cdot \log_e x + c$ |
198| $e^{kx}$ | ${1 \over k} e^{kx} + c$ |
199| $e^k$ | $e^kx + c$ |
200| $\sin kx$ | $-{1 \over k} \cos (kx) + c$ |
201| $\cos kx$ | ${1 \over k} \sin (kx) + c$ |
202| ${f^\prime (x)} \over {f(x)}$ | $\log_e f(x) + c$ |
203| $g^\prime(x)\cdot f^\prime(g(x)$ | $f(g(x))$ (chain rule)|
204| $f(x) \cdot g(x)$ | $\int [f^\prime(x) \cdot g(x)] dx + \int [g^\prime(x) f(x)] dx$ |
205| ${1 \over {ax+b}}$ | ${1 \over a} \log_e (ax+b) + c$ |
206| $(ax+b)^n$ | ${1 \over {a(n+1)}}(ax+b)^{n-1} + c$ |
207
208## Applications of antidifferentiation
209
210- $x$-intercepts of $y=f(x)$ identify $x$-coordinates of stationary points on $y=F(x)$
211- the nature of any stationary point of $y=F(x)$ is determined by the way the sign of the graph of $y=f(x)$ changes about its $x$-intercepts
212- if $f(x)$ is a polynomial of degree $n$, then $F(x)$ has degree $n+1$
213
214To find stationary points of a function, substitute $x$ value of given point into derivative. Solve for ${dy \over dx}=0$. Integrate to find original function.
215
216## Kinematics
217
218$${dV \over dt} = {\operatorname{change in volume} \over \operatorname{respect to time}}$$
219
220` |->--diff-->--| |-->--diff-->--|
221displacement velocity acceleration
222 |--<-antidiff-<---| |--<-antidiff-<-|`
223
224**displacement $x$** - change in position
225**velocity $v$** - change in displacement
226**acceleration $a$** - change in velocity
227
228$$v_{\operatorname{avg}}={\Delta x \over \Delta t}={{x_2 - x_1} \over {t_2 - t_1}}$$
229$$\operatorname{speed}_{\operatorname{avg}}={\Delta v \over \Delta t}$$
230