Unit 4 Related Rates: Linking Geometry, Time, and Derivatives

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25 Terms

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Related rates

Problems where two or more quantities change over time and are connected by an equation, allowing you to find an unknown rate from a known rate.

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Rate of change (with respect to time)

A derivative taken with respect to time, describing how a quantity changes per unit time (e.g., dx/dt).

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Leibniz notation (dx/dt)

Derivative notation that explicitly shows the variable changing (x) and the variable you differentiate with respect to (t), commonly used for rates.

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Function notation (x′(t))

Derivative notation emphasizing that x is a function of t and x′ gives its rate of change at time t.

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Newton “dot” notation (ẋ)

A shorthand for differentiation with respect to time; ẋ means dx/dt.

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Relationship equation

An equation (often geometric or algebraic) that links the changing variables, such as A = πr² or x² + y² = 169.

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Chain Rule factor in related rates

When differentiating something like r² with respect to time, you must include dr/dt: d/dt(r²) = 2r·dr/dt.

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Implicit differentiation (with respect to time)

Differentiating an equation involving variables that depend on t without solving explicitly for one variable first (e.g., d/dt(x² + y²) = 0).

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“At an instant” / snapshot value

Information given at a specific moment (e.g., when r = 10), used after differentiating to evaluate rates at that instant.

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Differentiate first, substitute second

A key rule: keep variables symbolic while differentiating, then plug in snapshot values afterward to avoid losing rate information.

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Units of a rate

The measurement units attached to a derivative (e.g., cm/s, ft/min); tracking units helps check correctness.

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Sign convention for rates

Increasing quantities have positive derivatives; decreasing quantities have negative derivatives (e.g., dx/dt = −2 if a distance is shrinking at 2 ft/s).

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Constant (in related rates)

A quantity that does not change with time, so its derivative is 0 (e.g., ladder length 13 ft implies d/dt(169) = 0).

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Modeling step

Translating the word/geometry context into the correct equation(s) relating variables before differentiating.

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Constraint

An additional relationship tying variables together (often from similar triangles or fixed shape), reducing the number of independent variables (e.g., r = (2/5)h in a cone).

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Similar triangles

A geometry tool that sets up proportional relationships between corresponding sides, often used to create constraints in cone and shadow problems.

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Pythagorean Theorem (for related rates)

Right-triangle relationship a² + b² = c² used to connect changing distances (e.g., x² + y² = 13² in a ladder problem).

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Sliding ladder setup

A classic related rates model where x (bottom distance) and y (top height) satisfy x² + y² = constant, and one rate (dx/dt) determines the other (dy/dt).

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Cone volume formula

Volume relationship for a cone: V = (1/3)πr²h, often paired with a similar-triangles constraint to eliminate r or h.

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Filling/draining rate (dV/dt)

The rate at which volume changes over time (e.g., water poured in at 3 ft³/min means dV/dt = 3).

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Shadow problem setup

A related rates situation using similar triangles plus an addition equation like y = x + s (light-to-tip distance equals person distance plus shadow length).

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Proportionality in a fixed-shape cone

Because the cone’s shape is fixed, radius and height scale together (r/h is constant), allowing r to be written as a multiple of h.

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Distance formula strategy (squaring to simplify)

For z = √(x² + y²), squaring gives z² = x² + y², which is often easier to differentiate with respect to t.

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Reasonableness check

A final step where you verify the sign and magnitude match the physical situation (e.g., ladder top must move downward, so dy/dt should be negative).

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“Relate, Differentiate, Substitute, Solve”

A memory aid for the standard related rates workflow: write the relationship, differentiate w.r.t. t, plug in snapshot/rates, and solve for the requested rate.

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