Given that #xe^y = x+1#, show that #e^y + xe^ydy/dx = 1#?
4 Answers
Given:
Begin the implicit differentiation process:
The derivative of a constant is 0:
When attempting to compute a derivative of the form
The left side of equation [1] is in this form where
Substituting this into the product rule we obtain the equation:
We know that
The exponential function is a special case where
After using the product rule and the chain rule, we have
We shall stop here because the above is what we want.
We use implicit differentiation to see that
#e^y + xe^y(dy/dx) = 1#
#xe^y(dy/dx) = 1 -e^y#
#dy/dx= (1 - e^y)/(xe^y)#
We now substitute into the given expression.
#e^y + xe^y(1 - e^y)/(xe^y) = 1#
#e^y+ 1 - e^y = 1#
#1 = 1#
As required.
Hopefully this helps!
Please see the explanation below
Explanation:
Another way of proving this is :
Let,
And
Therefore,
Rearranging,
Given expression:
# x e^y = x + 1 #
Inspection reveals that differential of RHS with respect to
# d/(dx)( x e^y) =d/(dx) (x + 1) #
# d/(dx)( x e^y) =1#
Using product rule and implicit differentiation on the LHS we get
#LHS= d/(dx)( x e^y)#
#=>LHS= x d/(dx) e^y+e^yd/(dx)x#
#=>LHS= x e^y(dy)/(dx)+e^y#
We see that it is same as
Hence Proved.