What is the derivative of this function arcsec(x^3)?

2 Answers
Nov 16, 2017

=(3x)/sqrt(x^2-1)

Explanation:

For this you need to know what the derivative of arcsec(x) is.

You can derive it fairly easily:

y = arcsec(x)
sec(y) = x
d/dx sec(y) = d/dx x
sec(y)tan(y)dy/dx = 1
dy/dx = 1/(sec(y)tan(y)
dy/dx = 1/(sec(arcsec(x))tan(arcsec(x)))
dy/dx = 1/(xsqrt(x^2-1))

In the last statement I simplified sec(arcsec(x)) to x, which is obvious, but I also simplified tan(arcsec(x)) to sqrt(x^2-1) which is slightly less obvious

If you draw a triangle such that sec(angle) = x, you can understand why it works:

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you can see that arcsec(x) = theta and tan(theta) = sqrt(x^2-1)

therefore tan(arcsec(x)) = sqrt(x^2-1)

Now we know the derivative of arcsec(x) and just need to apply a little chainrule to get our answer:

d/dx arcsec(x^3) = 1/(xsqrt(x^2-1))*d/dx x^3 = (3x^cancel2)/(cancelxsqrt(x^2-1))
=(3x)/sqrt(x^2-1)

Nov 16, 2017

dy/dx = 3/(absxsqrt(x^6-1))

Explanation:

If y=arcsec(x^3) then secy =x^3, that is: cosy=1/x^3

Differentiate implicitly:

-sinydy/dx = -3/x^4

dy/dx = 3/(x^4siny)

Now, for 0 <= y <= pi :

siny = sqrt(1-cos^2y) = sqrt(1-1/x^6)

and:

dy/dx = 3/(x^4 sqrt(1-1/x^6)) = (3sqrt(x^6))/(x^4sqrt(x^6-1))= 3/(absxsqrt(x^6-1))