The derivative of sin (x) is cos (x). It does not work the other way around, though. The derivative of cos (x) is -sin (x).
Sine (pi) is a constant, so the derivative of sine (pi) is zero.
The derivative of ex is ex. The derivative of ex is e.
The derivative of ex is ex
d/dx (ex + x3) = ex + 3x2
The derivative of x is not x. X is the same as x^1, so you use the power rule which decreases the power by one and brings the exponent down, giving 1x^0, which is equal to 1.
Sine (pi) is a constant, so the derivative of sine (pi) is zero.
The anti derivative of negative sine is cosine.
Generally, the derivative of sine is cosine.
The derivative of negative cosine is positive sine.
The derivative of ex is ex. The derivative of ex is e.
The derivative of ex is ex
A simple wave function can be expressed as a trigonometric function of either sine or cosine. lamba = A sine(a+bt) or lamba = A cosine(a+bt) where lamba = the y value of the wave A= magnitude of the wave a= phase angle b= frequency. the derivative of sine is cosine and the derivative of cosine is -sine so the derivative of a sine wave function would be y'=Ab cosine(a+bt) """"""""""""""""""" cosine wave function would be y' =-Ab sine(a+bt)
The deriviative of sine(x) is cosine(x).
sinh(x) = ½[ex-e-x]
I suppose you mean ex. The derivate is also ex.
Because the derivative of e^x is e^x (the original function back again). This is the only function that has this behavior.
d/dx (ex + x3) = ex + 3x2