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Composition of Functions: The process of combining two or more functions in order to create another function. One function is evaluated at a value of the independent variable and the result is substituted into the other function as the independent variable. The composition of functions f and g is written as: 1.7 – The Chain Rule The composition of functions is a function inside another function.
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1.7 – The Chain Rule
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Review of the Product Rule: and are composite functions.
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Additional Problems: 1.7 – The Chain Rule
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a) b)
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1.8 –Higher-Order Derivatives Higher-order derivatives provide a method to examine how a rate-of-change changes. Notations
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1.8 –Higher-Order Derivatives Find the requested higher-order derivatives.
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1.8 –Higher-Order Derivatives Velocity: the change in position with respect to a change in time. It is a rate of change with direction. Position, Velocity, and Acceleration
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1.8 –Higher-Order Derivatives Velocity: the change in position with respect to a change in time. It is a rate of change with direction. Position, Velocity, and Acceleration
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Acceleration: the change in velocity with respect to a change in time. It is a rate of change with direction. 1.8 –Higher-Order Derivatives
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a) b) 1.8 –Higher-Order Derivatives feet/sec/sec
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1.8 –Higher-Order Derivatives The position of a particle (in inches) moving along the x-axis after t seconds have elapsed is given by the following equation: s(t) = t 4 – 2t 3 – 4t 2 + 12t. (a) Calculate the velocity of the particle at time t. (b) Compute the particle's velocity at t = 1, 2, and 4 seconds. (c) Calculate the acceleration of the particle after 4 seconds. (d) When is the particle at rest? a) b) c) d)
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