Rachel Ramirez

Rachel Ramirez

Answered question

2022-05-17

Answer & Explanation

alenahelenash

alenahelenash

Expert2023-05-14Added 556 answers

To find the Jacobian of the transformation, we need to compute the partial derivatives of the new variables x and y with respect to the original variables u and v, respectively.
Let's start by finding the partial derivatives:
xu and xv for x=u2+4v2
Taking the partial derivative of x with respect to u while treating v as a constant:
xu=u(u2+4v2)=2u
Next, taking the partial derivative of x with respect to v while treating u as a constant:
xv=v(u2+4v2)=8v
Now, let's find the partial derivatives for y=3uv:
yu and yv for y=3uv
Taking the partial derivative of y with respect to u while treating v as a constant:
yu=u(3uv)=3v
Next, taking the partial derivative of y with respect to v while treating u as a constant:
yv=v(3uv)=3u
Now we can construct the Jacobian matrix by combining these partial derivatives:
J=[xuxvyuyv]=[2u8v3v3u]
Thus, the Jacobian matrix for the given transformation is:
J=[2u8v3v3u]

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