How do I find the derivative of 3e^(-12t) 3e12t?

1 Answer
Jan 2, 2016

You can use the chain rule.

(3e^(-12t))'=-36*e^(-12t)

Explanation:

The 3 is a constant, it can be kept out:

(3e^(-12t))'=3(e^(-12t))'

It's a mixed function. The outer function is the exponential, and the inner is a polynomial (sort of):

3(e^(-12t))'=3*e^(-12t)*(-12t)'=

=3*e^(-12t)*(-12)=-36*e^(-12t)

Deriving:

If the exponent was a simple variable and not a function, we would simply differentiate e^x. However, the exponent is a function and should be transformed. Let (3e^(-12t))=y and -12t=z, then the derivative is:

(dy)/dt=(dy)/dt*(dz)/dz=(dy)/dz*(dz)/dt

Which means you differentiate e^(-12t) as if it were e^x (unchanged), then you differentiate z which is -12t and finally you multiply them.