A abdog Member Joined Jul 21, 2012 Messages 155 Gender Undisclosed HSC N/A Mar 17, 2013 #1 Differentiate sinx(3x+1). u=sin x du=cos x v=3x+1 dv=3 Therefore, dy=3sinx + 3xcosx + cosx Last edited: Mar 17, 2013
Y yasminee96 Active Member Joined Sep 8, 2012 Messages 346 Gender Female HSC 2013 Mar 17, 2013 #2 Yep alternative (not much difference): expand it so sinx(3x+1) = 3xsinx + sinx then differentiate. just makes it less confusing
Yep alternative (not much difference): expand it so sinx(3x+1) = 3xsinx + sinx then differentiate. just makes it less confusing
B braintic Well-Known Member Joined Jan 20, 2011 Messages 2,137 Gender Undisclosed HSC N/A Mar 17, 2013 #3 The question is ambiguous. Its not clear whether it means (3x+1)sinx or sin[x(3x+1)]
Nws m8 Banned Joined Oct 21, 2012 Messages 494 Gender Male HSC 2012 Uni Grad 2018 Mar 17, 2013 #4 braintic said: The question is ambiguous. Its not clear whether it means (3x+1)sinx or sin[x(3x+1)] Click to expand... +1
braintic said: The question is ambiguous. Its not clear whether it means (3x+1)sinx or sin[x(3x+1)] Click to expand... +1
A abdog Member Joined Jul 21, 2012 Messages 155 Gender Undisclosed HSC N/A Mar 17, 2013 #5 It's the former
A abdog Member Joined Jul 21, 2012 Messages 155 Gender Undisclosed HSC N/A Mar 17, 2013 #6 But for some reason, the answer is: 3cos(3x+1)
Shadowless Member Joined May 3, 2010 Messages 342 Gender Male HSC 2012 Mar 17, 2013 #7 Then shouldn't it be: f(x) = sin(3x+1) ?
A abdog Member Joined Jul 21, 2012 Messages 155 Gender Undisclosed HSC N/A Mar 17, 2013 #8 Nope, the question is sinx(3x+1). Also, how do you simplify sinx=cosx? Does it become sinx/cosx = 1?
Shadowless Member Joined May 3, 2010 Messages 342 Gender Male HSC 2012 Mar 17, 2013 #9 hmm... well if... f(x) = (sin[x]).(3x+1) then... f'(x) = (sin[x])(3) + (3x+1)(cos[x]) = 3sin[x] + 3xcos[x] + cos[x] ? In relation to your statement 'does it become (sin[x])/(cos[x]) = 1', the answer is no. It's... 'sin[x]/cos[x] = tan[x]'.
hmm... well if... f(x) = (sin[x]).(3x+1) then... f'(x) = (sin[x])(3) + (3x+1)(cos[x]) = 3sin[x] + 3xcos[x] + cos[x] ? In relation to your statement 'does it become (sin[x])/(cos[x]) = 1', the answer is no. It's... 'sin[x]/cos[x] = tan[x]'.
A abdog Member Joined Jul 21, 2012 Messages 155 Gender Undisclosed HSC N/A Mar 17, 2013 #10 So I got a question that says find the point of intersection between y=cosx and y=sinx. So sinx=cosx. How do I go from here?
So I got a question that says find the point of intersection between y=cosx and y=sinx. So sinx=cosx. How do I go from here?
deswa1 Well-Known Member Joined Jul 12, 2011 Messages 2,256 Gender Male HSC 2012 Mar 17, 2013 #11 Divide both sides by cosx
A abdog Member Joined Jul 21, 2012 Messages 155 Gender Undisclosed HSC N/A Mar 17, 2013 #12 Wow, never thought of that before, thanks!