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Question: How do you find the second derivative of \(\ln \left( {{x^2} + 1} \right)\)?...

How do you find the second derivative of ln(x2+1)\ln \left( {{x^2} + 1} \right)?

Explanation

Solution

In order to determine the second derivative of ln(x2+1)\ln \left( {{x^2} + 1} \right), we will consider it as yy. Then determine the first derivative using ddxln(x)=1x\dfrac{d}{{dx}}\ln \left( x \right) = \dfrac{1}{x} and ddxxn=nxx1\dfrac{d}{{dx}}{x^n} = n{x^{x - 1}}. And, we will determine the second derivative using ddx(uv)=v.ddu(u)u.ddv(v)v2\dfrac{d}{{dx}}\left( {\dfrac{u}{v}} \right) = \dfrac{{v.\dfrac{d}{{du}}\left( u \right) - u.\dfrac{d}{{dv}}\left( v \right)}}{{{v^2}}}.

Complete step-by-step solution:
We need to determine the second derivative of ln(x2+1)\ln \left( {{x^2} + 1} \right).
Let us consider y=ln(x2+1)y = \ln \left( {{x^2} + 1} \right),
Now, let us differentiate yy with respect to xx.
We know that ddxln(x)=1x\dfrac{d}{{dx}}\ln \left( x \right) = \dfrac{1}{x} and ddxxn=nxx1\dfrac{d}{{dx}}{x^n} = n{x^{x - 1}}
Thus, we have,
dydx=ddxln(x2+1)\dfrac{{dy}}{{dx}} = \dfrac{d}{{dx}}\ln \left( {{x^2} + 1} \right)
dydx=2xx2+1\dfrac{{dy}}{{dx}} = \dfrac{{2x}}{{{x^2} + 1}}
Therefore, let us find the second derivative of yy with respect to xx.
dy2d2x=ddx(2xx2+1)\dfrac{{d{y^2}}}{{{d^2}x}} = \dfrac{d}{{dx}}\left( {\dfrac{{2x}}{{{x^2} + 1}}} \right)
We know that ddx(uv)=v.ddu(u)u.ddv(v)v2\dfrac{d}{{dx}}\left( {\dfrac{u}{v}} \right) = \dfrac{{v.\dfrac{d}{{du}}\left( u \right) - u.\dfrac{d}{{dv}}\left( v \right)}}{{{v^2}}}
Thus, we have,
dy2d2x=x2+1.ddx(2x)2x.ddx(x2+1)(x2+1)2\dfrac{{d{y^2}}}{{{d^2}x}} = \dfrac{{{x^2} + 1.\dfrac{d}{{dx}}\left( {2x} \right) - 2x.\dfrac{d}{{dx}}\left( {{x^2} + 1} \right)}}{{{{\left( {{x^2} + 1} \right)}^2}}}
dy2d2x=2(x2+1)2x(2x)(x2+1)2\dfrac{{d{y^2}}}{{{d^2}x}} = \dfrac{{2\left( {{x^2} + 1} \right) - 2x\left( {2x} \right)}}{{{{\left( {{x^2} + 1} \right)}^2}}}
dy2d2x=2x2+24x2(x2+1)2\dfrac{{d{y^2}}}{{{d^2}x}} = \dfrac{{2{x^2} + 2 - 4{x^2}}}{{{{\left( {{x^2} + 1} \right)}^2}}}
dy2d2x=22x2(x2+1)2\dfrac{{d{y^2}}}{{{d^2}x}} = \dfrac{{2 - 2{x^2}}}{{{{\left( {{x^2} + 1} \right)}^2}}}
Hence, the second derivative of y=ln(x2+1)y = \ln \left( {{x^2} + 1} \right)is 22x2(x2+1)2\dfrac{{2 - 2{x^2}}}{{{{\left( {{x^2} + 1} \right)}^2}}}.

Note: A differential equation is an equation with a function and one or more of its derivatives or differentials. dydy means an infinitely small change in yy. dxdx means an infinitely small change in xx. Integrating factor technique is used when the differential equation is of the form dydx+p(x)y=q(x)\dfrac{{dy}}{{dx}} + p\left( x \right)y = q\left( x \right) where pp and qq are both functions of xx only. First-order differential equation is of the form dydx+P(x)y=Q(x)\dfrac{{dy}}{{dx}} + P\left( x \right)y = Q\left( x \right) where PP and QQ are both functions of xx and the first derivative of yy. The order of the differential equation is the order of the highest order derivative present in the equation. The degree of the differential equation is the power of the highest order derivative, where the original equation is represented in the form of a polynomial equation in derivatives such as dydx,d2ydx2,d3ydx3\dfrac{{dy}}{{dx}},\,\dfrac{{{d^2}y}}{{d{x^2}}},\,\dfrac{{{d^3}y}}{{d{x^3}}} \ldots
In our world things change, and describing how they change often ends up as a differential equation. Differential equations can describe how populations change, how heat moves, how springs vibrate, how radioactive material decays and much more. They are a very natural way to describe many things in the universe.