topic badge
India
Class XI

Deriving the Power Rule

Lesson

To differentiate a function means to derive a related function that gives the gradient of the original function at each point of its domain.

We visualise the process for doing this by considering a secant line that cuts a graph at a point $x$x and also at a nearby point $x+\delta$x+δ. We form an expression for its gradient. We then imagine $\delta$δ becoming progressively smaller so that eventually, in the limit, the secant becomes a tangent. The gradient of the tangent is what we require. The process is illustrated in the following diagram.

The expression for the gradient of the secant line is the familiar 'rise-over-run'. Suppose we are differentiating a function $f$f. Then, the gradient of the secant passing through $x$x and $x+\delta$x+δ is $\frac{f(x+\delta)-f(x)}{(x+\delta)-x}$f(x+δ)f(x)(x+δ)x. We simplify this and find the limit as $\delta\rightarrow0$δ0.

We write

$f'(x)=\lim_{\delta\rightarrow0}\frac{f(x+\delta)-f(x)}{\delta}$f(x)=limδ0f(x+δ)f(x)δ.

This limit is called the derivative of the function $f$f and the process is called differentiation. The function $f'$f is also called the gradient function for $f$f.

 

Example 1

Linear functions

Linear functions are of the form $f(x)=ax+b$f(x)=ax+b where a and b are constants. The variable $x$x is raised to the power $1$1. We already know that the graph of such a function has a constant gradient of $a$a so, we can use it to test our limit statement. We have

$f'(x)$f(x) $=$= $\lim_{\delta\rightarrow0}\frac{a(x+\delta)+b-(ax+b)}{\delta}$limδ0a(x+δ)+b(ax+b)δ
  $=$= $\lim_{\delta\rightarrow0}\frac{a\delta}{\delta}$limδ0aδδ
  $=$= $a$a

We were able to cancel out the $\delta$δ from numerator and denominator because $\delta$δ is not yet $0$0 until the limit is reached.

Thus, the procedure has produced the expected result, $f'(x)=a$f(x)=a for all values of $x$x.

 

Example 2

Quadratic terms

Consider the function $g(x)=x^2$g(x)=x2. According to the procedure, we have

$g'(x)=\lim_{h\rightarrow0}\frac{(x+h)^2-x^2}{h}$g(x)=limh0(x+h)2x2h.

(We have used the symbol $h$h instead of $\delta$δ, for no particular reason.)

Then,

$g'(x)$g(x) $=$= $\lim_{h\rightarrow0}\frac{x^2+2xh+h^2-x^2}{h}$limh0x2+2xh+h2x2h
  $=$= $\lim_{h\rightarrow0}\frac{2xh+h^2}{h}$limh02xh+h2h
  $=$= $\lim_{h\rightarrow0}\frac{h(2x+h)}{h}$limh0h(2x+h)h
  $=$= $\lim_{h\rightarrow0}\frac{2x+h}{1}$limh02x+h1
  $=$= $2x$2x

 

Example 3

Positive integer power terms

If we look at what happens with a more general function $k(x)=x^n$k(x)=xn where $n$n is a positive integer, we should be able to find a method for finding the derivative of any term of this kind.

We write

$k'(x)$k(x) $=$= $\lim_{h\rightarrow0}\frac{(x+h)^n-x^n}{h}$limh0(x+h)nxnh
  $=$= $\lim_{h\rightarrow0}\frac{x^n+nhx^{n-1}+...+nh^{n-1}x+h^n-x^n}{h}$limh0xn+nhxn1+...+nhn1x+hnxnh
  $=$= $\lim_{h\rightarrow0}\frac{nhx^{n-1}+...+nh^{n-1}x+h^n}{h}$limh0nhxn1+...+nhn1x+hnh
  $=$= $\lim_{h\rightarrow0}\frac{h(nx^{n-1}+...nh^{n-2}x+h^{n-1})}{h}$limh0h(nxn1+...nhn2x+hn1)h
  $=$= $\lim_{h\rightarrow0}(nx^{n-1}+...+nh^{n-2}x+h^{n-1})$limh0(nxn1+...+nhn2x+hn1)
  $=$= $nx^{n-1}$nxn1

We omitted the middle terms in the binomial expansion. In the limit, most of the terms disappeared because they had $h$h as a factor.

With a little more work and a more general form of the binomial expansion, we can show that the differentiation of a power follows this rule for every exponent $n$n, positive, negative or zero, integer or not.

Practice Questions

QUESTION 1

Use the applet below to explore how the gradient of the tangent changes at different points along $y=x^2$y=x2. Then answer the questions that follow.

  1. Which feature of the gradient function tells us whether $y=x^2$y=x2 is increasing or decreasing?

    The gradient function is decreasing when $y=x^2$y=x2 is increasing, and increasing when $y=x^2$y=x2 is decreasing.

    A

    The gradient function is increasing when $y=x^2$y=x2 is increasing, and decreasing when $y=x^2$y=x2 is decreasing.

    B

    The gradient function is negative when $y=x^2$y=x2 is increasing, and positive when $y=x^2$y=x2 is decreasing.

    C

    The gradient function is positive when $y=x^2$y=x2 is increasing, and negative when $y=x^2$y=x2 is decreasing.

    D
  2. For $x>0$x>0, is the gradient of the tangent positive or negative?

    Positive

    A

    Negative

    B
  3. For $x\ge0$x0, as the value of $x$x increases how does the gradient of the tangent line change?

    The gradient of the tangent line increases at a constant rate.

    A

    The gradient of the tangent line increases at an increasing rate.

    B

    The gradient of the tangent line remains constant.

    C
  4. For $x<0$x<0, is the gradient of the tangent positive or negative?

    Positive

    A

    Negative

    B
  5. For $x<0$x<0, as the value of $x$x increases how does the gradient of the tangent line change?

    The gradient of the tangent line remains constant.

    A

    The gradient of the tangent line increases at a constant rate.

    B

    The gradient of the tangent line increases at an increasing rate.

    C
  6. Complete the following statement:

    "For $y=x^2$y=x2, the gradient of the tangent line changes at a constant rate. This means the derivative $y'$y is a             function."

    cubic

    A

    linear

    B

    constant

    C

    quadratic

    D

QUESTION 2

Consider the functions $f\left(x\right)=x^5$f(x)=x5 and $g\left(x\right)=x^4$g(x)=x4.

  1. Which of the following shows the graph of $f\left(x\right)$f(x) and its derivative?

    Loading Graph...

    A

    Loading Graph...

    B

    Loading Graph...

    C

    Loading Graph...

    D
  2. Which of the following shows the graph of $g\left(x\right)$g(x) and its derivative?

    Loading Graph...

    A

    Loading Graph...

    B

    Loading Graph...

    C

    Loading Graph...

    D
  3. Which of the following statements are true? Select all that apply.

    The graph of the derivative can be found by translating and/or stretching the original function.

    A

    Near the origin, the derivative has a greater value than the function.

    B

    A function and its derivative have the same sign for all values of $x$x.

    C

    If the degree of a function is even, then the degree of its derivative is odd and vice versa.

    D

QUESTION 3

Consider the function $f\left(x\right)=x^2$f(x)=x2.

  1. Using first principles, find the derivative of $f\left(x\right)=x^2$f(x)=x2.

    Show all steps of working.

  2. The derivative of $y=x^n$y=xn for other values of $n$n can be found using first principles in a similar way. The results for $n=2,3,4$n=2,3,4 and $5$5 are summarised in the table below.

    $y$y $x^2$x2 $x^3$x3 $x^4$x4 $x^5$x5
    $y'$y $2x$2x $3x^2$3x2 $4x^3$4x3 $5x^4$5x4

    By observing the pattern in the table, deduce the derivative of the function $g\left(x\right)=x^8$g(x)=x8.

  3. Deduce the general form of the derivative of $y=x^n$y=xn for any value of $n$n.

Outcomes

11.C.LD.1

Derivative introduced as rate of change both as that of distance function and geometrically, intuitive idea of limit. Definition of derivative, relate it to slope of tangent of the curve, derivative of sum, difference, product and quotient of functions. Derivatives of polynomial and trigonometric functions.

What is Mathspace

About Mathspace