How do you find the derivative of ln(x^2)?

2 Answers
Jun 21, 2016

\frac{2}{x}

Explanation:

Using the chain rule and letting u(x) = x^2 we have \frac{d}{dx} \ln ( u(x)) = \frac{d}{du} \ln ( u(x)) . \frac{du}{dx} = \frac{1}{u(x) }2x

= \frac{2x}{x^2} = \frac{2}{x}

Jun 21, 2016

2/x

Explanation:

There are two methods:

Using the Chain Rule:

Since the derivative of ln(x) is 1/x, we see that the derivative of a function inside the natural logarithm, such as ln(f(x)), is 1/f(x)*f'(x).

So, for ln(x^2), the derivative is 1/x^2*2x, since 2x is the derivative of x^2.

Then, we see that 1/x^2*2x simplifies to 2/x.

Simplifying first:

Using the rule log(a^b)=b*log(a), we see that ln(x^2)=2*ln(x).

The derivative of 2ln(x) is just 2 times the derivative of ln(x), which is 1/x.

We see that 2*1/x=2/x, the answer we obtained earlier.