What is the slope of the tangent line of x^2e^(xy-x-y)= C x2exyxy=C, where C is an arbitrary constant, at (0,0)(0,0)?

2 Answers
Mar 16, 2016

Slope of the tangent line equals 00 at point (0,0)(0,0)

Explanation:

By implicit differentiation:

d/dx (x^2 e^(xy-x-y)) = x^2 d/dx(e^(xy-x-y)) + d/dx(x^2) * e^(xy-x-y)ddx(x2exyxy)=x2ddx(exyxy)+ddx(x2)exyxy (Product Rule)

=x^2e^(xy-x-y) * (dy/dx*1 +y -1 -dy/dx) + 2x * e^(xy-x-y)=x2exyxy(dydx1+y1dydx)+2xexyxy
(Chain Rule, Product Rule and Power Rule)

=x^2e^(xy-x-y) * (cancel(dy/dx*1) +y -1 -cancel(dy/dx)) + 2x * e^(xy-x-y)

=x^2e^(xy-x-y) * (y - 1) +2xe^(xy-x-y)

=e^(xy-x-y) (x^2(y-1) + 2x))

Therefore e^(xy-x-y) (x^2(y-1) + 2x)) defines the slope of the tangent to the function at point (x,y)

Slope at point (0,0) = e^0 * 0 = 1 * 0 = 0

Mar 16, 2016

The tangent line is vertical. The slope is not defined.

Explanation:

If the point (0,0) is on the graph of x^2e^(xy-x-y)=C,

then C = (0)^2 e^(0-0-0) = 0.

But now we have x^2e^(xy-x-y)=0 which implies that x^2 = 0 (because for all u, e^u != 0).

So the equation is equivalent to x=0 which is the y-axis. The tangent line to a line is the line. So, the tangent line to the vertical axis is the vertical axis, the slope of which is not defined.