Question
Differentiate the following functions with respect to x:
$\text{e}^{\sqrt{\cot\text{x}}}$

Answer

Let, $\text{y}=\text{e}^\sqrt{{\cot\text{x}}}$
$\Rightarrow\ \text{y}=\text{e}^{(\cot\text{x})^\frac{1}{2}}$
Differentiate with respect to x we get,
$\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}=\frac{\text{d}}{\text{dx}}\Big(\text{e}^{(\cot\text{x})^\frac{1}{2}}\Big)$
$=\text{e}^{(\cot\text{x})^\frac{1}{2}}\frac{\text{d}}{\text{dx}}(\cot\text{x})^\frac{1}{2}$
[Using chain rule]
$=\text{e}^\sqrt{\cot\text{x}}\times\frac{1}{2}(\cot\text{x})^{\frac{1}{2}-1}\frac{\text{d}}{\text{dx}}(\cot\text{x})$
$=-\frac{\text{e}^\sqrt{\cot\text{x}}\times\text{cosec}^2\text{x}}{2\sqrt{\cot\text{x}}}$
So,
$\frac{\text{d}}{\text{dx}}\Big(\text{e}^\sqrt{\cot\text{x}}\Big)=-\frac{\text{e}^\sqrt{\cot\text{x}}\times\text{cosec}^2\text{x}}{2\sqrt{\cot\text{x}}}$

Need a full question paper?

Generate a complete, print-ready paper with questions like this in minutes — across 16+ boards, with answer keys.

Start Generating Free

Similar questions

Solve the following systems of homogeneous linear equations by matrix method:
$3x - y + 2z = 0$
$4x + 3y + 3z = 0$
$5x + 7y + 4z =0$
If $\text{y}=\sin^{-1}\Big(\frac{\text{x}}{1+\text{x}^2}\Big)+\cos^{-1}\Big(\frac{1}{\sqrt{1+\text{x}^2}}\Big), 0<\text{x}<\infty$ prove that $\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}=\frac{4}{1+\text{x}^2}$
Without using the concept of inverse of a matrix, find the matrix $\begin{bmatrix}\text{x}&\text{y}\\\text{z}&\text{u}\end{bmatrix}$ such that $\begin{bmatrix}5&-7\\-2&3\end{bmatrix}\begin{bmatrix}\text{x}&\text{y}\\\text{z}&\text{u}\end{bmatrix}=\begin{bmatrix}-16&-6\\7&2\end{bmatrix}$
Solve the following differential equation
$\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}-\text{x}\text{e}^\text{x}-\frac{5}{2}+\cos^2\text{x}$
Form the differential equation corresponding to $\text{y}=\text{e}^{\text{mx}}$ by eliminating m.
Prove that $2\tan^{-1}\bigg(\sqrt{\frac{\text{a}-\text{b}}{\text{a}+\text{b}}}\tan\frac{\theta}{2}\bigg)=\cos^{-1}\Big(\frac{\text{a}\cos\theta+b}{\text{a}+\text{b}\cos\theta}\Big)$
Evaluate the following definite integrals:
$\int\limits_{0}^{\frac{\pi}{2}}\sin^3\text{x}\text{ dx}$
Differentiate the following functions with respect to x:
$\sin^{-1}\Big\{\sqrt{\frac{1-\text{x}}{2}}\Big\},0<\text{x}<1$
Prove the following identities:
$\begin{vmatrix}\text{a}^3&2&\text{a}\\\text{b}^3&2&\text{b}\\\text{c}^3&2&\text{c}\end{vmatrix}$
$=2(\text{a}-\text{b})(\text{b}-\text{c})(\text{c}-\text{a})(\text{a}+\text{b}+\text{c})$
If $\text{y}=\frac{\text{x}\sin^{-1}\text{x}}{\sqrt{1-\text{x}^2}},$ prove that $(1-\text{x}^2)\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}=\text{x}+\frac{\text{y}}{\text{x}}$