What is the slope of the line normal to the tangent line of f(x) = sec^2x-xcos(x-pi/4) f(x)=sec2xxcos(xπ4) at x= (15pi)/8 x=15π8?

1 Answer
Feb 16, 2018

=> y = 0.063(x - (15pi)/8) - 1.08y=0.063(x15π8)1.08

Interactive graph

Explanation:

The first thing we'll need to do is calculate f'(x) at x = (15pi)/8.

Let's do this term by term. For the sec^2(x) term, note that we have two functions embedded within one another: x^2, and sec(x). So, we'll need to use a chain rule here:

d/dx(sec(x))^2 = 2sec(x) * d/dx(sec(x))

color(blue)(= 2sec^2(x)tan(x))

For the 2nd term, we'll need to use a product rule. So:

d/dx(xcos(x-pi/4)) = color(red)(d/dx(x))cos(x-pi/4) + color(red)(d/dxcos(x-pi/4))(x)

color(blue)(= cos(x-pi/4) - xsin(x-pi/4))

You may wonder why we didn't use a chain rule for this part, since we have an (x - pi/4) inside the cosine. The answer is we implicitly did, but we ignored it. Notice how the derivative of (x - pi/4) is simply 1? Hence, multiplying that on doesn't change anything, so we do not write it out in calculations.

Now, we put everything together:

d/dx(sec^2x-xcos(x-pi/4)) = color(violet)(2sec^2(x)tan(x) - cos(x-pi/4) + xsin(x-pi/4))

Watch your signs.

Now, we need to find the slope of the line tangent to f(x) at x = (15pi)/8. To do this, we just plug this value into f'(x):

f'((15pi)/8) = (2sec^2((15pi)/8)tan((15pi)/8) - cos((15pi)/8-pi/4) + (15pi)/8sin((15pi)/8-pi/4)) = color(violet)(~~-6.79)

However, what we want is not the line tangent to f(x), but the line normal to it. To get this, we just take the negative reciprocal of the slope above.

m_(norm) = -1/-15.78 color(violet)(~~0.015)

Now, we just fit everything into point slope form:

#y = m(x-x_0) + y_0

=> y = 0.063(x - (15pi)/8) - 1.08

Take a look at this interactive graph to see what this looks like!

Hope that helped :)