What is the slope of the tangent line of #x^2e^(xy)= C #, where C is an arbitrary constant, at #(-1,1)#?

1 Answer
Dec 11, 2017

The slope of the tangent is #m=-1#.

Explanation:

The slope of the tangent line to the curve is the value of the derivative #dy/dx# in the point #P(-1,1)#.

We can calculate the derivative using implicit differentiation:

#x^2e^(xy) = C#

Differentiate both sides with respect to #x#:

#2xe^(xy)+x^2e^(xy)(y+xdy/dx) = 0#

#xe^(xy)(2+xy+x^2dy/dx) = 0#

Now, #e^(xy) !=0# because the exponential is never null, and #x!=0# otherwise we would have #C=0#, and #y# indeterminate, which means for #C=0# the curve defined by the equation is the line #x=0# that does not pass through #P#. So:

#2+xy+x^2dy/dx = 0#

#dy/dx = -(2+xy)/x^2#

In the point #P(-1,1)# then the value of the derivative is:

#[dy/dx]_(-1,1) = -(2+(-1)*1)/(-1)^2 = -1#

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