Students in calculus learn the product rule of differentiation as (f*g)'= f'*g+f*g', but a common mistake is taking the product rule as (f*g)'= f'*g'.
Usually that answer is wrong, but there are pairs of functions f and g where the wrong product rule generates the right answer.
If f,g is one of those special pairs and f=xn (n≠0), then what is function g?
Let g(x) = C/(n-x)^n.
We want to show that
[x^n]'*g'(x) = x^n*g'(x) + [x^n]'*g(x)
or
([x^n]' - x^n)*g'(x) = [x^n]'*g(x)
([x^n]' - x^n)*g'(x) = (n*x^(n-1) - x^n)*[n*C/(n-x)^(n+1)]
= n*x^(n-1)*C/(n-x)^n
= [x^n]'*g(x)
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Posted by Bractals
on 2005-11-30 10:16:56 |