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As we have seen, the derivative of a function at a given point gives us the rate of change or slope of the tangent line to the function at that point. If we differentiate a position function at a given time, we obtain the velocity at that time. It seems reasonable to conclude that knowing the derivative of the function at every point would produce valuable information about the behavior of the function. However, the process of finding the derivative at even a handful of values using the techniques of the preceding section would quickly become quite tedious. In this section we define the derivative function and learn a process for finding it.
The derivative function gives the derivative of a function at each point in the domain of the original function for which the derivative is defined. We can formally define a derivative function as follows.
Let be a function. The derivative function , denoted by is the function whose domain consists of those values of such that the following limit exists:
A function is said to be differentiable at if exists. More generally, a function is said to be differentiable on if it is differentiable at every point in an open set and a differentiable function is one in which exists on its domain.
In the next few examples we use [link] to find the derivative of a function.
Find the derivative of
Start directly with the definition of the derivative function. Use [link] .
Find the derivative of the function
Follow the same procedure here, but without having to multiply by the conjugate.
We use a variety of different notations to express the derivative of a function. In [link] we showed that if then If we had expressed this function in the form we could have expressed the derivative as or We could have conveyed the same information by writing Thus, for the function each of the following notations represents the derivative of
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