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What’s the derivative of sin^2(cos(x^2))

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3 votes

Answer:


\displaystyle (dy)/(dx) = -4x \sin x^2 \sin (\cos x^2) \cos (\cos x^2)

General Formulas and Concepts:

Calculus

Differentiation

  • Derivatives
  • Derivative Notation

Basic Power Rule:

  1. f(x) = cxⁿ
  2. f’(x) = c·nxⁿ⁻¹

Derivative Rule [Chain Rule]:
\displaystyle (d)/(dx)[f(g(x))] =f'(g(x)) \cdot g'(x)

Explanation:

Step 1: Define

Identify


\displaystyle y = \sin^2 (\cos x^2)

Step 2: Differentiate

  1. Basic Power Rule [Derivative Rule - Chain Rule]:
    \displaystyle y' = 2 \sin (\cos x^2) \Big( \sin (\cos x^2) \Big)'
  2. Trigonometric Differentiation [Derivative Rule - Chain Rule]:
    \displaystyle y' = -2 \sin (\cos x^2) \cos (\cos x^2) (\cos x^2)'
  3. Trigonometric Differentiation [Derivative Rule - Chain Rule]:
    \displaystyle y' = -2 \sin x^2 \sin (\cos x^2) \cos (\cos x^2) (x^2)'
  4. Basic Power Rule:
    \displaystyle y' = -4x \sin x^2 \sin (\cos x^2) \cos (\cos x^2)

Topic: AP Calculus AB/BC (Calculus I/I + II)

Unit: Differentiation

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