第2.2节 微分与切线

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2.2 DIFFERENTIALS AND TANGENT LINES
Or
Figure
2.2.1
EXAMPLE 1
For the curve y=x3, find the tangent lines at the points (0, 0), (1,1), and (___, ____)
Figure 2.2.2
Given a curve y= f(x), suppose that x starts out with the value a and then changes by an infinitesimal amount Δx. What happens to y? Along the curve, y will change by the amount
But along the tangent line y will change by the amount
When x changes from a to a + Δx, we see that:
In the last section we introduced the dependent variable Δy, the increment of y, with the equation
Δy is equal to the change in y along the curve as x changes to x + Δx.
The following theorem gives a simple but useful formula for the increment Δy.
INCREMENT
for some infinitesimal ε, which depends on x and Δx.
PROOF
Case
1
Case
2
EXAMPLE
Substituting,
Since
3x²
cancels,
We shall now introduce a new dependent variable dy, called the differential of y, with the equation
dy is equal to the change in y along the tangent line as x changes to x+ Δx. In Figure 2.2.3 we see dy and Δy under the microscope.
Figure 2.2.3
To keep our notation uniform we also introduce the symbol dx as another name for Δx. For an independent variable x, Δx and dx are the same, but for a dependent variable y. Δy and dy are different.
DEFINITION
Compare this equation with
The quotient dy/ dx is a very convenient alternative symbol for the derivative f ′(x). In fact we shall write the derivative in the form dy/ dx most of the time.
The differential dy depends on two independent variables x and dx. In functional notation,
Where df is the real function of two variables defined by
When dx is substituted for Δx and dy for f ′(x)dx, the Increment Theorem takes the short form
The Increment Theorem can be explained graphically using an infinitesimal microscope. Under an infinitesimal microscope, a line of length Δx is magnified to a line of unit length, but a line of length ε Δx is only magnified to an infinitesimal length ε. Thus the Increment Theorem shows that when f ′(x) exists:
Figure 2.2.3 is not really accurate. The curvature had to be exaggerated in order to distinguish the curve and tangent line under the microscope. To give an accurate picture, we need a more complicated figure like Figure 2.2.4, which has a second infinitesimal microscope trained on the point (a+ Δx, b+Δy) in the field of view of the original microscope. This second microscope magnifies ε dx to a unit length and magnifies Δx to an infinite length.
Figure 2.2.4
EXAMPLE 3
The differential notation may also be used when we are given a system of formulas in which two or more dependent variables depend on an independent variable. For exmple if y and z are functions of x,
Then Δy,Δ z, dy , dz are determined by
EXAMPLE
The meaning of the symbols for increment and differential in this example will be different if we take y as the independent variable. Then x and z are functions of y.
Now Δy=dy is just an independent variable, while
Moreover,
We may also apply the differential notation to terms. Ifl(x) is a term with the variable x, then l(x)determines a function f,
And the differential d( l(x)) has the meaning
EXAMPLE 5
PROBLEMS
In Problems 1-8, express Δyand dy as functions of xandΔx, and for Δxinfinitesimal find an infinitesimal εsuch that Δy=dy+ε Δx.
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In Problems 23-30 below, find the equation of the line tangent to the given curve at the given point.
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□33 Prove that the line tangent to the parabola y=x²at P(x0, ____) does not meet the