dr|ft Posted April 7, 2005 Posted April 7, 2005 find derivate of root (2x - 1) using first principles, Thanks for your help.
Dave Posted April 7, 2005 Posted April 7, 2005 This is fairly straightforward. You should get, as your limit: [math]\lim_{h \to 0} \frac{\sqrt{2x-1}-\sqrt{2(x+h) - 1}}{h}[/math] Now, by multiplying by the conjugate of the top, we get: [math]\lim_{h \to 0} \frac{-2h}{h(\sqrt{2x-1}+\sqrt{2(x+h) - 1})}[/math] This should give you your answer.
VikingF Posted April 10, 2005 Posted April 10, 2005 The answer to the problem is: 1/root(2x-1), but when I solve Dave's equation above, I get -1/root(2x-1)....? d/dx(root(f(x))) = f'(x)/2root(f(x)) isn't it?
Dave Posted April 10, 2005 Posted April 10, 2005 Very sorry, I got my limit the wrong way around. It should be: [math]\lim_{h \to 0} \frac{\sqrt{2(x+h) - 1} - \sqrt{2x-1}}{h}[/math] This gives the correct answer of [math]\frac{1}{\sqrt{2x-1}}[/math].
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