Question
If $\sin(\text{x}+\text{y})=\log(\text{x}+\text{y}),$ then $\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}=$
  1. 2
  2. -2
  3. 1
  4. -1

Answer

  1. -1

Solution:

We have, $\sin(\text{x}+\text{y})=\log(\text{x}+\text{y})$

$\Rightarrow\cos(\text{x}+\text{y})\Big(1+\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}\Big)=\frac{1}{(\text{x}+\text{y})}\Big(1+\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}\Big)$

$\Rightarrow\cos(\text{x}+\text{y})+\cos(\text{x}+\text{y})\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}=\frac{1}{(\text{x}+\text{y})}+\frac{1}{(\text{x}+\text{y})}\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}$

$\Rightarrow\cos(\text{x}+\text{y})\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}-\frac{1}{(\text{x}+\text{y})}\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}=\frac{1}{(\text{x}+\text{y})}-\cos(\text{x}+\text{y})$

$\Rightarrow\Big\{\cos(\text{x}+\text{y})-\frac{1}{(\text{x}+\text{y})}\Big\}\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}=\frac{1}{\text{x}+\text{y}}-\cos(\text{x}+\text{y})$

$\Rightarrow\cos(\text{x}+\text{y})\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}-\frac{1}{(\text{x}+\text{y})}\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}=\frac{1}{(\text{x}+\text{y})}-\cos(\text{x}+\text{y})$

$\Rightarrow\Big\{\cos(\text{x}+\text{y})-\frac{1}{(\text{x}+\text{y})}\Big\}\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}=\frac{1}{(\text{x}+\text{y})}-\cos(\text{x}+\text{y})$

$\Rightarrow\Big\{\frac{1}{(\text{x}+\text{y})}-\cos(\text{x}+\text{y})\Big\}\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}=\frac{1}{(\text{x}+\text{y})}-\cos(\text{x}+\text{y})$

$\Rightarrow\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}=-1$

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