What is Chain rule: Definition and 508 Discussions

In calculus, the chain rule is a formula to compute the derivative of a composite function. That is, if f and g are differentiable functions, then the chain rule expresses the derivative of their composite f ∘ g — the function which maps x to



f
(
g
(
x
)
)


{\displaystyle f(g(x))}
— in terms of the derivatives of f and g and the product of functions as follows:




(
f

g

)


=
(

f



g
)


g


.


{\displaystyle (f\circ g)'=(f'\circ g)\cdot g'.}
Alternatively, by letting h = f ∘ g (equiv., h(x) = f(g(x)) for all x), one can also write the chain rule in Lagrange's notation, as follows:





h


(
x
)
=

f


(
g
(
x
)
)

g


(
x
)
.


{\displaystyle h'(x)=f'(g(x))g'(x).}
The chain rule may also be rewritten in Leibniz's notation in the following way. If a variable z depends on the variable y, which itself depends on the variable x (i.e., y and z are dependent variables), then z, via the intermediate variable of y, depends on x as well. In which case, the chain rule states that:







d
z


d
x



=



d
z


d
y







d
y


d
x



.


{\displaystyle {\frac {dz}{dx}}={\frac {dz}{dy}}\cdot {\frac {dy}{dx}}.}
More precisely, to indicate the point each derivative is evaluated at,









d
z


d
x



|


x


=






d
z


d
y



|


y
(
x
)









d
y


d
x



|


x




{\displaystyle \left.{\frac {dz}{dx}}\right|_{x}=\left.{\frac {dz}{dy}}\right|_{y(x)}\cdot \left.{\frac {dy}{dx}}\right|_{x}}
.
The versions of the chain rule in the Lagrange and the Leibniz notation are equivalent, in the sense that if



z
=
f
(
y
)


{\displaystyle z=f(y)}
and



y
=
g
(
x
)


{\displaystyle y=g(x)}
, so that



z
=
f
(
g
(
x
)
)
=
(
f

g
)
(
x
)


{\displaystyle z=f(g(x))=(f\circ g)(x)}
, then










d
z


d
x



|


x


=
(
f

g

)


(
x
)


{\displaystyle \left.{\frac {dz}{dx}}\right|_{x}=(f\circ g)'(x)}
and










d
z


d
y



|


y
(
x
)









d
y


d
x



|


x


=

f


(
y
(
x
)
)

g


(
x
)
=

f


(
g
(
x
)
)

g


(
x
)
.


{\displaystyle \left.{\frac {dz}{dy}}\right|_{y(x)}\cdot \left.{\frac {dy}{dx}}\right|_{x}=f'(y(x))g'(x)=f'(g(x))g'(x).}
Intuitively, the chain rule states that knowing the instantaneous rate of change of z relative to y and that of y relative to x allows one to calculate the instantaneous rate of change of z relative to x. As put by George F. Simmons: "if a car travels twice as fast as a bicycle and the bicycle is four times as fast as a walking man, then the car travels 2 × 4 = 8 times as fast as the man."In integration, the counterpart to the chain rule is the substitution rule.

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  1. Petrus

    MHB Is the chain rule necessary for finding the derivative of r/sqrt(r^2+1)?

    Hello, I got problem again with chain rule and would like to have advice for this problem, $\frac{\displaystyle r} {\displaystyle \sqrt{r^2+1}}$ is it product rule I shall also use because I have rewrite it as $r(r^2+1)^{-0.5}$
  2. R

    Having problems with the (I think) general chain rule

    Homework Statement Consider the transformation \mathbf{x}=G(\mathbf{u}), \text{ where } \mathbf{x}=(x_1,x_2,x_3),\:\mathbf{u}=(u_1,u_2,u_3) given byx_1=u_1+u_3^2x_2=u_3-u_1^2x_3=u_1+u_2+u_3 I need to compute the derivative of this transformation, and then show that the transformation is...
  3. J

    Derivative of cos(e^-θ^2) using the chain rule | Power and exponential rules

    Homework Statement Find the derivative of the following cos(e^-θ^2) Homework Equations cos=-sin e^x=e^x power rule The Attempt at a Solution So I have gotten this far: -sin(e^-θ^2) * ... but then i don't know where to go. Would I treat the -θ^2 as the next step inwards? My...
  4. P

    Derivative of sin(x)/(1+x^2) using Chain Rule | Simple Homework Example

    Homework Statement Use chain rule to find the derivative of f(x)= sin(x)/(1+x^2) Homework Equations Chain Rule (f(g(x)))'*g'(x) The Attempt at a Solution y'(x)= cos (x)/(1+x^2)* (1-x^2)/((1+x^2)^2) I just want to make sure I am doing it correctly and this would be acceptable as a final answer.
  5. J

    Chain rule question: if f is a differentiable function

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  6. R

    Partial derivative and chain rule

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  7. C

    Proving Linearity of a Function Using Chain Rule

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  8. K

    D'alembert's solution to the wave equation, on Chain Rule

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  9. P

    Partial derivative chain rule for gradient

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  10. P

    MHB Chain Rule and 'The Mob'....Pretty darn good explanation

    This guy relates the calculus chain rule to a popular mob movie. You should really check it out. This is one of the newer videos but people like the way this guy explains things. Here is the link: Ghetto Dude Relates Calculus Chain Rule To "THE MOB" - YouTube
  11. Astrum

    Question about the application of the chain rule

    Air is being pumped into a spherical balloon at a rate of 5 cm3/min. Determine the rate at which the radius of the balloon is increasing when the diameter of the balloon is 20 cm. So, to solve, I know HOW to do it, I just don't know WHY it's right. \frac{dv}{dr}=4pi r^{2}...
  12. S

    Exploring the Relationship Between the Chain Rule and Tangent Vectors

    Homework Statement Show that: \frac{dx^\nu}{d \lambda} \partial_\nu \frac{dx^\mu}{d \lambda} = \frac{d^2 x^\mu}{d \lambda^2} The Attempt at a Solution Well, I could simply cancel the dx^nu and get the desired result; that I do understand. But what about actually looking at...
  13. B

    Contracting over indices chain rule

    Homework Statement As part of a problem I am doing I am asked to show uβ∂βuα = aα where u is 4 velocity and a refers to 4 acceleration. The way to do this is not immediately obvious to me, especially since the problem implies there should be a chain rule step involved which I am not seeing. I...
  14. P

    Partial derivative chain rule proof

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  15. B

    Chain Rule Trig Derivative Problem

    Homework Statement Find the derivative of y = sin(πx)2 Homework Equations Chain Rule: y' = f'(u) * u' The Attempt at a Solution (See attached image) The answer according to the textbook is 2π2xcos(πx)2. What am I doing wrong here?
  16. T

    Chain Rule Exercise: Find dg/dx + dg/dy

    Homework Statement Suppose g(x,y)=f(x-y,y-s) Homework Equations Nothing else The Attempt at a Solution Find dg/dx + dg/dy
  17. L

    Showing this Euler's equation with a homogeneous function via the chain rule

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  18. S

    Multivariable Chain Rule of sin(x)cos(2y)

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  19. J

    Implicit Differentiation, chain rule, and simplifying

    Okay so, I am having trouble figuring out what exactly to do in implicit differentiation and usage of the chain rule. Like, I keep getting the wrong answer somehow. See, from what I understand you have to find the derivative of both sides then use the chain rule or something and then solve for...
  20. U

    Derivative of 101-x2 using Chain Rule - Calculus I Explained

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  21. STEMucator

    Is the Chain Rule Application for Second Partial Derivatives Correct?

    Homework Statement I'm curious to know if I'm actually doing this correctly. Suppose f(x,y) is a function where x = p(s,t) and y = g(s,t) so that w(s,t) = f(x,y). Compute ws and then wst Homework Equations Chain Rule. The Attempt at a Solution So! Let's compute ws first. Whenever I use a...
  22. D

    Confusion on the chain rule

    Let g(t) = f(tx, ty). Using the chain rule, we get g'(t) = (\frac{\partial f}{\partial x})(tx, ty) * x + (\frac{\partial f}{\partial y})(tx, ty) * y this was actually part of a proof and what i don't understand is that why didn't they write (\frac{\partial f}{\partial (tx)}) and...
  23. J

    Evaluate partial derivative. chain rule?

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  24. C

    How Do You Apply Chain Rule for Functions in Polar Coordinates?

    Homework Statement Given that f(x,y) = g(r,\theta), where x = r\cos\theta and y = r\sin\theta, find formulae for \frac{∂f}{∂x} and \frac{∂f}{∂y} expressed entirely in terms of r, \theta, \frac{∂g}{∂r} , \frac{∂g}{∂\theta} . The Attempt at a Solution I said \frac{∂f}{∂x} =...
  25. D

    MHB Chain rule partial derivatives

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  26. S

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  27. B

    Chain rule with partial derivatives and divergence

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  28. V

    Explaining Chain Rule: vdv/dx=1/2(dv^2)/dx

    ok stupid question probably- take v(velocity) to be a function of x and x to be a function of t(time). then dv/dt=vdv/dx that's cool but in the hint in problem 2.12 classical mechanics by john r taylor he equates vdv/dx and 1/2(dv^2)/dx that is- vdv/dx=1/2(dv^2)/dx Could someone please...
  29. DeusAbscondus

    MHB Solving Chain Rule Problems with e^(u): An Explanation for Beginners

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  30. DeusAbscondus

    MHB Chain rule problem and choice of notation

    I have attached a pdf setting forth my question. This is a write up of a lesson i just had on yourtutor, in which i think the tutor might have made an error: this is a direct quote from the whiteboard: $Let g(x)=2x, f(y)=e^y\Rightarrow(fog)(x)=f(g(x))=f(2x)=e^{2x}$$\\Now...
  31. S

    Solving Calculus Chain Rule: Step by Step Guide

    Hi, I have been doing research in my spare time this summer on calculus proofs. I am working on a mathematics degree and I am working to understand calculus inside and out. It has been going really well but I have sort of hit a bump with the calc 1 chain rule. Here is my attempt: lim h -> 0...
  32. M

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  33. V

    Chain Rule Paradox or Am I Doing Something Wrong?

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  34. B

    Making Sense of the Chain Rule: Can I Multiply to Find dy/dx?

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  35. F

    Find the derivative of the function using the chain rule

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  36. U

    Chain rule with multiple variables

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  37. B

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  38. R

    Need help with chain rule for relating ds/dt to dx/dt and dy/dt

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  39. Y

    Any proof for the CHAIN RULE ?

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  40. A

    Calculus 3: Chain Rule for Finding dx/dy with x=yz and y=2sin(y+z)

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  41. Kushwoho44

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  42. T

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  43. T

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  44. H

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  45. W

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  46. M

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  47. G

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  48. W

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  49. A

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