Makro
Porcupine
And1. Find the equation of the tangent to the curve y = cos(pi - x) at the point (pi/2, 0)
2. Find the gradient of the normal to the curve y = tan 3x at the point where x = pi/12.
And1. Find the equation of the tangent to the curve y = cos(pi - x) at the point (pi/2, 0)
2. Find the gradient of the normal to the curve y = tan 3x at the point where x = pi/12.
ok, so x degrees is (pi)x/180 radiens so then your just integrating cos[(pi)x/180]Find
(needed latex)
Is that the integral of cos0(x) or cos(x0)?Find
(needed latex)
um its a chain rule so...Thanks for 1, yeah 3 is a weird question. The answers show it as a degrees sign. The final one ended up being 180/pi sin x(deg) + C.
In regards to 2, can you expand on it a bit more? Just not getting it atm, pretty much from line 2 to line 3.
it was cosx(degrees)Is that the integral of cos0(x) or cos(x0)?
Integrating cos(x0) w.r.t x gives xcos(1) = 0.5403023059x
or integrating cos0(x) w.r.t x gives x as the other poster mentions.
that looks right, thanks.ok, so x degrees is (pi)x/180 radiens so then your just integrating cos[(pi)x/180]
= (180/pi)sin[(pi)x/180]
where x is in radiens
Thanks.um its a chain rule so...
let u = 3x, du/dx = 3
y=tanu, dy/du = sec^2u = sec^2(3x)
therefore y' = dy/du x du/dx
y' = 3sec^2(3x)
btw for q2 it was asking for grad of normal, not tangent.. so the answer is -1/62. y=tan3x
y' = 3sec^2(3x)
y' = 6 at x = pi/12
1. Well... you can take it as Integrate (cosx) between pi & 0 ...1. Integrate from pi to 0 cos(pi + x) dx.
2. Sketch y = tan x/2 for -2pi <= x <= 2pi