The derivative of 40 is zero. The derivative of any constant is zero.
Zero. In general, the derivative of any constant is zero.
The "double prime", or second derivative of y = 5x, equals zero. The first derivative is 5, a constant. Since the derivative of any constant is zero, the derivative of 5 is zero.
zero
ln(3) is a constant. If graphed, it would be a horizontal line. Its derivative is zero.
The derivative of 40 is zero. The derivative of any constant is zero.
Zero. In general, the derivative of any constant is zero.
The "double prime", or second derivative of y = 5x, equals zero. The first derivative is 5, a constant. Since the derivative of any constant is zero, the derivative of 5 is zero.
One definition of the derivative is: "Rate of change". Since a constant is constant, it doesn't change, and the rate at which it changes is zero.
zero
ln(3) is a constant. If graphed, it would be a horizontal line. Its derivative is zero.
"Pi divided by 2" is a number, i.e. a constant. The derivative is the rate of change. The derivative of any constant is zero, because a constant never changes.
ln(3) is a constant. If graphed, it would be a horizontal line. Its derivative is zero.
f(x) = c, where c is constant, has a derivative of zero.
2 x 2 = 4. 4 is a constant. The derivative of a constant is always 0. Therefore, The derivative of 2 x 2 is zero.
The derivate of zero - as well as the derivative of ANY constant (non-variable) number, is zero. (A graph of y = 0 for example will be a horizontal line - the slope is zero.)
The differentiation of a constant is zero because a constant value does not change with respect to the variable being differentiated. The derivative measures the rate of change of a function, and since a constant has no change, its derivative is zero.