Find the derivative of an integral: (d)/(dx) int_ (pi)/(2))^(x^3) cos(t)dt

Hallie Stanton

Hallie Stanton

Answered question

2022-11-13

Find the derivative of an integral:
d d x π 2 x 3 cos ( t ) d t

Answer & Explanation

naudiliwnw

naudiliwnw

Beginner2022-11-14Added 12 answers

Substitute u for x 3 :
d d x π 2 u cos ( t ) d t
We’ll use the chain rule to find the derivative, because we want to transform the integral into a form that works with the second fundamental theorem of calculus:
d d u ( π 2 u cos ( t ) d t ) × d u d x
Now we can find the derivative by using the second fundamental theorem of calculus, which states that if f is continuous on [ a , b ] and a x b the derivative of an integral of f can be calculated d d x a x f ( t ) d t = f ( x ): cos u × d u d x
Rewrite the derivative:
cos u × d d x ( u )
Substitute back u = x 3 We can do this because the substituted values don’t represent the actual solution (they just simplify the calculation of one part of the problem!).
cos x 3 × d d x ( x 3 )
Find the derivative of x 3 by using the differentiation rule
d d x x n = n x n 1
cos x 3 × 3 x 2
Use the commutative property to reorder the terms:
3 x 2 × cos x 3
The derivative of an integral d d x π 2 x 3 cos ( t ) d t is:
3 x 2 × cos x 3

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