specificagent1
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do you have to do it in terms of e or can it be done simply through use of lnYou use the identity
Then you differentiate from there.
I'm assuming you mean to take the ln of both sides and then differentiate.do you have to do it in terms of e or can it be done simply through use of ln
derive it as 1/T x DT/DtI'm assuming you mean to take the ln of both sides and then differentiate.
On the LHS I'm not even sure how to derive , and on the RHS you are going to have to derive the equation anyway. So I believe that the the best method would just be to do what I did in the first post.
derive it as 1/T x DT/Dt
ah i see thanks man.
We kind of end up going back to where we started, better to just differentiate it using e.