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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.
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).
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.
Function notation (x′(t))
Derivative notation emphasizing that x is a function of t and x′ gives its rate of change at time t.
Newton “dot” notation (ẋ)
A shorthand for differentiation with respect to time; ẋ means dx/dt.
Relationship equation
An equation (often geometric or algebraic) that links the changing variables, such as A = πr² or x² + y² = 169.
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.
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).
“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.
Differentiate first, substitute second
A key rule: keep variables symbolic while differentiating, then plug in snapshot values afterward to avoid losing rate information.
Units of a rate
The measurement units attached to a derivative (e.g., cm/s, ft/min); tracking units helps check correctness.
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).
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).
Modeling step
Translating the word/geometry context into the correct equation(s) relating variables before differentiating.
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).
Similar triangles
A geometry tool that sets up proportional relationships between corresponding sides, often used to create constraints in cone and shadow problems.
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).
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).
Cone volume formula
Volume relationship for a cone: V = (1/3)πr²h, often paired with a similar-triangles constraint to eliminate r or h.
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).
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).
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.
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.
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).
“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.