Lecture 3.8 Derivation of Exp & Log Functions
Lecture 3.8 Derivation of Exp & Log Functions
Photo by Vickie Kelly, 2007 Greg Kelly, Hanford High School, Richland, Washington
Look at the graph of ye x
definition of derivative
Now we attempt to find a general formula for the
derivative of y e using the definition.
x
d x e x h e x h
1
dx
e lim
h 0 h
e lim
x
h 0
e
h
e x eh e x
lim
h 0 h This is the slope at x=0,
which we have assumed to
x eh 1 be 1.
lim e
h 0
h e x 1
ex
d x
dx
e e x
x
e is its own derivative!
d u u du
e e
dx dx
x
We can now use this formula to find the derivative of a
d x
dx
a
d ln a x
dx
e ( e x
and ln x are inverse functions.)
d x ln a
dx
e
d
e x ln a
x ln a (chain rule)
dx
d x
dx
a e x ln a
ln a
ln
( lnaax is a constant.)
a
d ln a x
dx
e
Incorporating the chain rule:
d x ln a
dx
e d u du
d dx
a a ln a
u
dx
e x ln a
x ln a
dx
So far today we have:
d u u du d du
e e
dx
a a ln a
u u
dx
dx dx
y ln x dy 1
y
dx e
e xy
d y d
dx
e x
dx
d
dx
ln x
1
x
dy
ey
1 d 1 du
dx ln u
dx u dx
To find the derivative of a common log function, you
could just use the change of base rule for logs:
d d ln x 1 d 1 1
log x ln x
dx dx ln10 ln10 dx ln10 x
The formula for the derivative of a log of any base
other than e is:
d 1 du
log a u
dx u ln a dx
d u u du d du
e e
dx
a a ln a
u u
dx
dx dx
d 1 du d 1 du
ln u log a u
dx u dx dx u ln a dx