Implicit differentiation of this equation
Show older comments
I am learning Differentiation in Matlab I need help in finding implicit derivatives of this equations find dy/dx when x^2+x*y+y^2=100 Thank you.
1 Comment
madhan ravi
on 23 Aug 2018
Is y a function of x and x(t)?
Accepted Answer
More Answers (1)
Consider implicit function
. It is not always possible to solve analytically for
. However, almost always you can use the Implicit Function Theorem:
. It is not always possible to solve analytically for
. However, almost always you can use the Implicit Function Theorem:(
are partial derivatives:
).
Thus, define the implicit function,
, and the derivative is
, and the derivative issyms x y %Declaring symbilic variables
F(x,y) = x^2 + x*y + y^2 - 100 %Declaring implicit function
% Using Implicit Function Theorem
dy_dx = - diff(F,x)/diff(F,y)
% Answer:
% -(2*x + y)/(x + 2*y)
This derivative is a function of both x and y. However it has a meaning only for pairs
which satisfy the implicit function
. You can solve for such points using what Walter Roberson suggested. For example, solve for y as a function of x, and substitute
:
. You can solve for such points using what Walter Roberson suggested. For example, solve for y as a function of x, and substitute double(subs(solve(F, y), x, 10))
This gives two points which satisfy the implicit function:
, and
. You can calculate the derivatve
at these points for example:
x0 = 10; y0 = -10;
F(x0, y0) %answer 0, i.e. the implicit function is satisfied.
dy_dx(x0, y0) %answer 1
x1 = 10; y1 = 0;
F(x1, y1) %answer 0, i.e. the implicit function is satisfied.
dy_dx(x1, y1) %answer -2
1 Comment
UMAIR
on 9 Apr 2023
If we want to find d^2y/dx^2 ?
Categories
Find more on Function Creation in Help Center and File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!