How do you find #y''# by implicit differentiation of #x^3+y^3=1# ?

1 Answer
Sep 6, 2014

Differentiate one step at a time, then when you have a #(d^2y)/dx^2# term (i.e. y'') or can easily get one, rearrange the equation.

Implicit differentiation is remarkably similar to "regular" differentiation. We just need to treat any term with a y in it slightly differently.

First, we differentiate both sides of the equation:
#d/dx(x^3+y^3) = d/dx(1)#

By the addition rule:
#d/dx(x^3+y^3) = d/dx(x^3)+d/dx(y^3)#

We know that #d/dxx^3 = 3x^2# and #d/dx1=0#, so
#3x^2+d/dx(y^3)=0#

Now we use the chain rule to implicitly find #d/dx(y^3)#:
Let #u = y^3#
Then #(du)/dy = 3y^2#
and since #(du)/dy*dy/dx = (du)/dx#
we have #d/dx(y^3) = 3y^2*dy/dx#.

So we have #3x^2+3y^2*dy/dx = 0#, and we can rearrange our equation to get #dy/dx = (-3x^2)/(3y^2)#.

From here, the next step is to again differentiate both sides, this time using the quotient rule:
#(d^2y)/dx^2=d/dx(-(3x^2)/(3y^2)) = -d/dx((3x^2)/(3y^2))#
#=(3y^2*d/dx(3x^2)-3x^2*d/dx(3y^2))/(3y^2)^2#
#=-(6x3y^2 - 3x^2*d/dx(3y^2))/(9y^4)#

To find #d/dx(3y^2)#, we again implicitly differentiate to get #6y*dy/dx#

And so:
#(d^2y)/dx^2 = -(18xy^2 - 18x^2y*dy/dx)/(9y^4)#

Finally, recall that #dy/dx = (-3x^2)/(3y^2)#

So: #(d^2y)/dx^2 = -(18xy^2 - 18x^2y*(-3x^2)/(3y^2))/(9y^4)#.