Derivatives of Exponential and Inverse Trigonometric Functions Notes | Scholar Quill
MD-002›Derivatives of Exponential and Inverse Trigonometric Functions
Math Deficiency – IITopic 24 of 32
Derivatives of Exponential and Inverse Trigonometric Functions
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Derivatives of Exponential and Inverse Trigonometric Functions
1. Derivatives of Exponential Functions
a. Natural Exponential Function (𝑒ˣ)
The derivative of ex is unique because it is equal to itself: dxdex=ex
b. General Exponential Functions (𝑎ˣ)
For any base a>0, the derivative incorporates a logarithmic correction factor: dxdax=axlna Special case: If a=e, then lne=1, reducing to the natural exponential case.
c. Chain Rule Applications
When the exponent is a function u(x): dxdeu(x)=eu(x)⋅u′(x) dxdau(x)=au(x)lna⋅u′(x)
Example: dxde3x2=e3x2⋅6x
2. Derivatives of Inverse Trigonometric Functions
Each inverse trig function has a distinct derivative formula, often involving square roots in the denominator.
a. Arcsine (sin⁻¹𝑥) dxdsin−1x=1−x21for ∣x∣<1
b. Arccosine (cos⁻¹𝑥) dxdcos−1x=−1−x21for ∣x∣<1
c. Arctangent (tan⁻¹𝑥) dxdtan−1x=1+x21for all real x
d. Arcsecant (sec⁻¹𝑥) dxdsec−1x=∣x∣x2−11for ∣x∣>1
e. Arccosecant (csc⁻¹𝑥) dxdcsc−1x=−∣x∣x2−11for ∣x∣>1
f. Arccotangent (cot⁻¹𝑥) dxdcot−1x=−1+x21for all real x
3. Proof Techniques
a. Exponential Derivatives
Use the limit definition of the derivative and properties of eh.
For ax, rewrite as exlna and apply the chain rule.
b. Inverse Trig Derivatives
Implicit differentiation: Example for sin−1x:
Let y=sin−1x. Then x=siny.
Differentiate implicitly: 1=cosy⋅dxdy.
Solve for dxdy, using cosy=1−x2.
4. Common Mistakes to Avoid
Chain Rule Errors: Forgetting to multiply by u′(x) in eu(x) or sin−1(u(x)). Incorrect:dxde2x=e2x Correct:dxde2x=2e2x.
Domain Restrictions:
dxdsin−1x is undefined for ∣x∣≥1.
dxdsec−1x requires ∣x∣>1.
Sign Errors:
Confusing cos−1x and sin−1x derivatives (negative sign).
Misapplying derivatives of cot−1x vs. tan−1x.
5. Applications
Exponential Growth/Decay: Modeling populations or radioactive decay.