How do you differentiate #y=13^sinx#?

1 Answer
Dec 23, 2017

#13^(sin(x)) * cos(x) * ln(13)#
using the Chain

Explanation:

start by Changing the look of the equation a little bit
Realize that 13 is equal to #e^(ln(13))# as #ln# which is the natural log is the log base #e#

#therefore# the equation becomes #(e^(ln(13)))^sin(x)#
and according to index rules, it is equal to #e^(ln(13)*sin(x)#

now let #f(x) = e^x#
and #g(x) = ln(13) * sin(x)#
so #y = f(g(x))#

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chain_rule
using the chain rule, the derivative of #y# is equal to
the derivative of the outside function evaluated at the inside function multiplied by the Derivative of the inside function

#= d/dx y = f'(g(x))* g'(x)#

therefore on evalation, the answer becomes

#e^(ln(13)*sin(x))*cos(x)*ln(13)#

#therefore# #(e^(ln13))^(sin(x)) * cos(x) * ln(13)#

= #13^(sin(x)) * cos(x) * ln(13)#