Derivatives of Transcendental Functions

Learning Objectives

  • Evaluate the derivatives of trigonometric and inverse trigonometric functions.
  • Understand the unique derivative properties of exponential and logarithmic functions.
  • Apply logarithmic differentiation to simplify complex derivatives.
  • Differentiate hyperbolic and inverse hyperbolic functions and understand their applications.
Transcendental functions (like sine, cosine, exe^x, ln⁑x\ln x) are not algebraic; they "transcend" algebra. They are fundamental to modeling periodic phenomena, growth, decay, and many engineering applications.

Transcendental Function

A mathematical function that cannot be expressed as a finite combination of the algebraic operations of addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, raising to a power, and extracting a root.

Trigonometric Functions

The derivatives of sine and cosine are cyclic. The derivative of sine is cosine, and the derivative of cosine is negative sine.

Trigonometric Derivatives

The fundamental derivatives of the six trigonometric functions.

ddx[sin⁑u]=cos⁑uβ‹…dudx\frac{d}{dx}[\sin u] = \cos u \cdot \frac{du}{dx}ddx[cos⁑u]=βˆ’sin⁑uβ‹…dudx\frac{d}{dx}[\cos u] = -\sin u \cdot \frac{du}{dx}ddx[tan⁑u]=sec⁑2uβ‹…dudx\frac{d}{dx}[\tan u] = \sec^2 u \cdot \frac{du}{dx}ddx[csc⁑u]=βˆ’csc⁑ucot⁑uβ‹…dudx\frac{d}{dx}[\csc u] = -\csc u \cot u \cdot \frac{du}{dx}ddx[sec⁑u]=sec⁑utan⁑uβ‹…dudx\frac{d}{dx}[\sec u] = \sec u \tan u \cdot \frac{du}{dx}ddx[cot⁑u]=βˆ’csc⁑2uβ‹…dudx\frac{d}{dx}[\cot u] = -\csc^2 u \cdot \frac{du}{dx}

Variables

SymbolDescriptionUnit
uuA differentiable function of x-
dudx\frac{du}{dx}The derivative of u with respect to x-

Interactive Simulation

Interact with the simulation below to explore transcendental derivatives.

Trigonometric Derivative

Observe the derivative graph and tangent slope changes dynamically.

ddx[sin⁑x]=cos⁑x\frac{d}{dx}[\sin x] = \cos x
-3.16.3
f(x) = sin(x)0.8415
f'(x) = cos(x)0.5403
Tangent Slope0.5403
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Inverse Trigonometric Functions

The inverse trigonometric functions (arcsin⁑x\arcsin x, arccos⁑x\arccos x, etc.) have their own differentiation rules derived implicitly. Notice the domain restrictions (e.g., inside the square root must be positive).

Inverse Trigonometric Derivatives

Derivatives of inverse trigonometric functions, valid over specific domains.

ddx[arcsin⁑u]=11βˆ’u2β‹…dudx\frac{d}{dx}[\arcsin u] = \frac{1}{\sqrt{1-u^2}} \cdot \frac{du}{dx}ddx[arccos⁑u]=βˆ’11βˆ’u2β‹…dudx\frac{d}{dx}[\arccos u] = -\frac{1}{\sqrt{1-u^2}} \cdot \frac{du}{dx}ddx[arctan⁑u]=11+u2β‹…dudx\frac{d}{dx}[\arctan u] = \frac{1}{1+u^2} \cdot \frac{du}{dx}ddx[arccotΒ u]=βˆ’11+u2β‹…dudx\frac{d}{dx}[\text{arccot } u] = -\frac{1}{1+u^2} \cdot \frac{du}{dx}ddx[arcsecΒ u]=1∣u∣u2βˆ’1β‹…dudx\frac{d}{dx}[\text{arcsec } u] = \frac{1}{|u|\sqrt{u^2-1}} \cdot \frac{du}{dx}ddx[arccscΒ u]=βˆ’1∣u∣u2βˆ’1β‹…dudx\frac{d}{dx}[\text{arccsc } u] = -\frac{1}{|u|\sqrt{u^2-1}} \cdot \frac{du}{dx}

Variables

SymbolDescriptionUnit
uuA differentiable function of x-
dudx\frac{du}{dx}The derivative of u with respect to x-

Exponential and Logarithmic Functions

The exponential function exe^x is unique in calculus: it is its own derivative. This property makes it the natural choice for describing growth proportional to size. For other bases, we use the chain rule with a natural logarithm scaling factor.

Exponential & Logarithmic Derivative Concepts

The exponential function exe^x is the only function whose derivative is itself. For general exponential functions with base aa, differentiating introduces a scaling factor ln⁑a\ln a.

Logarithmic derivatives connect to rational functions (e.g., the derivative of ln⁑x\ln x is 1/x1/x). For logarithms with base aa, we apply the change of base formula, effectively differentiating ln⁑uln⁑a\frac{\ln u}{\ln a}.

Exponential and Logarithmic Rules

Differentiation rules for natural and general exponential and logarithmic functions.

ddx[eu]=euβ‹…dudx\frac{d}{dx}[e^u] = e^u \cdot \frac{du}{dx}ddx[au]=auln⁑aβ‹…dudx\frac{d}{dx}[a^u] = a^u \ln a \cdot \frac{du}{dx}ddx[ln⁑u]=1uβ‹…dudx\frac{d}{dx}[\ln u] = \frac{1}{u} \cdot \frac{du}{dx}ddx[log⁑au]=1uln⁑aβ‹…dudx\frac{d}{dx}[\log_a u] = \frac{1}{u \ln a} \cdot \frac{du}{dx}

Variables

SymbolDescriptionUnit
uuA differentiable function of x-
aaA constant base (a > 0, a \neq 1)-
dudx\frac{du}{dx}The derivative of u with respect to x-

Interactive Simulation

Interact with the simulation below to explore exponential growth and its rate of change.

Exponential Growth: P(t)=P0ertP(t) = P_0 e^{rt}

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Observation: The solid blue line represents the population P(t)P(t), and the dashed red line is its derivative Pβ€²(t)P'(t). Notice how Pβ€²(t)P'(t) is always a constant multiple of P(t)P(t).

Logarithmic Differentiation

Logarithmic differentiation is a technique that uses properties of logarithms to simplify the differentiation of complex products, quotients, and powers, especially when the variable appears in both the base and the exponent (like xxx^x).

Steps for Logarithmic Differentiation

  1. Take the natural logarithm (ln⁑\ln) of both sides of the equation.

Use logarithm properties to simplify the expression:

  • ln⁑(AB)=ln⁑A+ln⁑B\ln(AB) = \ln A + \ln B
  • ln⁑(A/B)=ln⁑Aβˆ’ln⁑B\ln(A/B) = \ln A - \ln B
  • ln⁑(AB)=Bln⁑A\ln(A^B) = B \ln A
  1. Differentiate implicitly with respect to xx. Remember the derivative of ln⁑y\ln y is 1ydydx\frac{1}{y}\frac{dy}{dx}.
  2. Solve for dydx\frac{dy}{dx} and substitute the original expression for yy.

Hyperbolic Functions

Hyperbolic functions are defined using exponentials (exe^x and eβˆ’xe^{-x}) and relate to hyperbolas similarly to how trig functions relate to circles. They appear frequently in engineering (e.g., the catenary curve of a hanging cable).

Hyperbolic Functions

Functions defined using the natural exponential function (exe^x and eβˆ’xe^{-x}) that describe the coordinates of points on a hyperbola, similar to how trigonometric functions relate to a circle.

Hyperbolic Function Definitions

The mathematical definitions of the primary hyperbolic functions.

sinh⁑x=exβˆ’eβˆ’x2\sinh x = \frac{e^x - e^{-x}}{2}cosh⁑x=ex+eβˆ’x2\cosh x = \frac{e^x + e^{-x}}{2}tanh⁑x=sinh⁑xcosh⁑x\tanh x = \frac{\sinh x}{\cosh x}

Variables

SymbolDescriptionUnit
xxA real number-

Hyperbolic Derivatives

Derivatives of hyperbolic functions. Note the positive sign for the derivative of cosh, unlike its trigonometric counterpart.

ddx[sinh⁑u]=cosh⁑uβ‹…dudx\frac{d}{dx}[\sinh u] = \cosh u \cdot \frac{du}{dx}ddx[cosh⁑u]=sinh⁑uβ‹…dudx\frac{d}{dx}[\cosh u] = \sinh u \cdot \frac{du}{dx}ddx[tanh⁑u]=sech2uβ‹…dudx\frac{d}{dx}[\tanh u] = \text{sech}^2 u \cdot \frac{du}{dx}

Variables

SymbolDescriptionUnit
uuA differentiable function of x-
dudx\frac{du}{dx}The derivative of u with respect to x-

Inverse Hyperbolic Functions

The inverse hyperbolic functions also possess unique differentiation properties. These derivatives frequently lead to algebraic expressions containing inverse roots, proving incredibly useful for solving advanced integrals and differential equations.

Inverse Hyperbolic Derivatives

Derivatives of inverse hyperbolic functions.

ddx[arcsinhΒ u]=1u2+1β‹…dudx\frac{d}{dx}[\text{arcsinh } u] = \frac{1}{\sqrt{u^2+1}} \cdot \frac{du}{dx}ddx[arccoshΒ u]=1u2βˆ’1β‹…dudx\frac{d}{dx}[\text{arccosh } u] = \frac{1}{\sqrt{u^2-1}} \cdot \frac{du}{dx}ddx[arctanhΒ u]=11βˆ’u2β‹…dudx\frac{d}{dx}[\text{arctanh } u] = \frac{1}{1-u^2} \cdot \frac{du}{dx}ddx[arccothΒ u]=11βˆ’u2β‹…dudx\frac{d}{dx}[\text{arccoth } u] = \frac{1}{1-u^2} \cdot \frac{du}{dx}

Variables

SymbolDescriptionUnit
uuA differentiable function of x-
dudx\frac{du}{dx}The derivative of u with respect to x-
Key Takeaways
  • Trig Derivatives follow a cyclic pattern. Remember the negative signs for co-functions (cos⁑,cot⁑,csc⁑\cos, \cot, \csc).
  • Inverse Trig derivatives are algebraic functions involving roots and squares.
  • exe^x is the only function whose derivative is itself.
  • ln⁑x\ln x has a derivative of 1/x1/x, linking logarithms to rational functions.
  • Logarithmic differentiation simplifies taking the derivative of expressions with variables in exponents or complicated products/quotients.
  • Hyperbolic derivatives are very similar to trig derivatives but watch out for sign differences (e.g., derivative of cosh⁑\cosh is positive sinh⁑\sinh).
  • Inverse Hyperbolic derivatives yield rational functions or inverse square roots, distinguishing them fundamentally from their trigonometric counterparts.