Derivative Of Arctan

  1. Derivative Of Arctan(4x)
  2. Derivative Of Arctanh
  3. Derivative Of Arctan 2
  4. Derivative Of Arctan 1
  5. Derivative Of Arctan X

What is the derivative of #y=arctan(cos(x))#?

1 Answer

Paul Belliveau ยท Amory W.

In the following discussion and solutions the derivative of a function h(x) will be denoted by or h'(x). The derivatives of the above-mentioned inverse trigonometric functions follow from trigonometry identities, implicit differentiation, and the chain rule. Find the first derivative of f(x) = arctan x + x 2 Solution to Example 2: Let g(x) = arctan x and h(x) = x 2, function f may be considered as the sum of functions g and h: f(x) = g(x) + h(x). Hence we use the sum rule, f '(x) = g '(x) + h '(x), to differentiate function f as follows f '(x) = 1 / (1 + x 2 ) + 2x = (2x 3 + 2x + 1) / (1 + x 2 ).

This is a case of knowing the how the derivative of inverse tangent works, and then following the chain rule.

If we were looking at #y=arctan(x)#, there's a way to determine the derivative if you've forgotten the formula.

First remember that #arctan(x)# means 'inverse tangent of x,' sometimes written as #tan^(-1)(x)#. To invert means to switch the x and the y (among other things, but that's the important meaning here).

So #y=tan^(-1)(x)# means the same thing as

#x=tan(y)#

Notice the tangent is no longer an inverse after the switch.

Now we can use implicit differentiation. That's where we don't care whether or not we're looking at a function, that is, we don't care if we have y on one side and everything else on the other. We just derive everything as we go along, and we write #dy/dx# after every term that contains a y (that's a very, very over-simplified explanation of implicit differentiation, but it will work for this problem).

So we derive

Derivative Of Arctan(4x)

#x=tan(y)#

and we get

#1=sec^2(y) dy/dx#

Derivative Of Arctanh

which is the same as

#dy/dx=cos^2(y)#

Which seems straightforward enough. Except for one thing. We don't usually have derivatives that still have y's in them. Not in the first year of Calculus, anyway. We should get rid of that y.

We can go back to a right triangle here. We started with #x=tan(y)#. Than means that there is a right triangle somewhere where the angle is y and the tangent of that angle is x, or #x/1#.

So:

Then by the Pythagorean Theorem, the hypotenuse can be found:

#a^2+b^2=c^2#

#1^2+x^2=c^2#

#c=sqrt(1+x^2)#

So the #cos(y)=1/sqrt(1+x^2)#

meaning that if

#y=tan^(-1)(x)#

then

#dy/dx=cos^2(y)#

which is the same as

#dy/dx=1/(1+x^2)#

So if we're looking at #y=arctan(cos(x))#, then we apply the derivative rule above, with the chain rule.

The chain rule say that if you have an 'inside function' and an 'outside function,' then you take the derivative of the outside function, and multiply that by the derivative of the inside function, or

If #y=f(g(x))#

#dy/dx=f'(g(x))g'(x)#

Notice the inside function does not change when you derive the outside function.

If #y=arctan(cos(x))#, then my outside function is #y=arctan(x)# (and now we know that derivative). My inside function is #cos(x)#.

Finally:

#y=arctan(cos(x))#

#dy/dx=1/(sqrt(1+(cos(x)^2))) (-sin(x))#

since the derivative of #cos(x)# is #-sin(x)#.

Written more simply,

#dy/dx= (-sin(x))/(sqrt(1+cos^2(x)))#

Hope this helps.

Derivative Of Arctan 2

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Differentiating Inverse Trigonometric Functions
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