Everything is fine.I just want to check my method
(The question put that superscript x on the integral... not sure if that was intended or a mistake... anyway)
I have no idea how to apply all three rules into this question...
(Later question that was easier to complete: so that nobody uses it)
Hm, I'm getting dx/dt = f(t)
I have no idea how to apply all three rules into this question...
(Later question that was easier to complete: so that nobody uses it)
Ah, well that's fairly easy then, the result follows through almost immediately.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leibniz_integral_rule#Formal_statement .
To compute these three terms, we'll need to use the various rules mentioned (FTC etc.). I'll let you have a go from here.
Because the limits and integrand both depend on t, we can't just use FTC simply like that (I'm assuming you subbed t for s in the integrand to get your dx/dt).Hm, I'm getting dx/dt = f(t)
Clearly I'm doing something wrong, but I'm not quite sure what.
I had the same problem lol. I forgot about the dependence-on-the-variable problemHm, I'm getting dx/dt = f(t)
Clearly I'm doing something wrong, but I'm not quite sure what.
Yeah.I'm dumb. Does du/dt = 1 when we let u=t?
I agreeEverything is fine.
Forgotten how to do this
Back then, using the multivariable chain rule I did get the answer out successfully, but once again I'm stumped on technicality.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leibniz_integral_rule#Formal_statement .
To compute these three terms, we'll need to use the various rules mentioned (FTC etc.). I'll let you have a go from here.
Differentiate with respect to aForgotten how to do this
I messed that one up cause for some reason whilst I wrote partial/partial a I still tried to treat it as a polynomial and not an exponential lolDifferentiate with respect to a