Unit 4 Related Rates: Connecting Changing Quantities in Time

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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 a known relationship, so their rates of change are related.

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Rate of change (with respect to time)

A derivative like d(variable)/dt that measures how fast a quantity changes per unit time, including units (e.g., cm/s).

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Implicit differentiation (in related rates)

Differentiating an equation relating variables with respect to t, even if t is not shown explicitly, because the variables depend on time.

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Chain Rule in related rates

When differentiating a quantity like r^2 with respect to t, you must multiply by dr/dt (e.g., d/dt(r^2)=2r·dr/dt).

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Constraint equation

A single equation (often from geometry) that relates the changing variables in a related rates problem (e.g., x^2+y^2=L^2).

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“Differentiate with respect to time”

The core move in related rates: apply d/dt to both sides of the constraint equation to connect the variables’ rates.

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Instantaneous rate

A rate evaluated at a specific moment (“at the moment when…”), using the variable values at that instant.

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Variable vs. rate

Distinguishing a quantity (like r or y) from its time derivative (dr/dt or dy/dt); they are not interchangeable.

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Units check

Using units to verify correctness (e.g., (cm)(cm/s)=cm^2/s for dA/dt).

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Sign of a rate

Positive means increasing in the chosen positive direction; negative means decreasing or moving in the opposite direction.

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“Equation first, derivative second, numbers last”

Workflow memory aid: write the relationship, differentiate, then substitute numerical values to avoid breaking the variable relationship.

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Standard related rates workflow

Define variables, write one constraint equation, differentiate w.r.t. t, substitute values at the instant, solve for the unknown rate (with sign/units).

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Diagram (related rates)

A labeled picture of the situation that helps choose correct variables, identify constants, and write the correct geometric relationship.

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Constant (in related rates)

A quantity that does not change over time (e.g., ladder length), so its derivative with respect to t is 0.

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Pythagorean theorem constraint

For a right-triangle situation: x^2 + y^2 = L^2 (often used for ladders, distances, and perpendicular motion).

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Differentiated Pythagorean equation

From x^2+y^2=L^2 (L constant): 2x·dx/dt + 2y·dy/dt = 0.

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Ladder sliding interpretation

In the ladder problem, as the bottom moves away (x increases), the top moves down (y decreases), so dy/dt is negative.

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Circle area formula

A = πr^2, relating a circle’s area A to its radius r.

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Area related-rates equation (circle)

Differentiating A=πr^2 gives dA/dt = 2πr·dr/dt.

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“Plugging in too early” mistake

Substituting numerical values before differentiating (e.g., r=12) can turn a changing variable into a constant and destroy the rate relationship.

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Cone volume formula

V = (1/3)πr^2h, relating the volume of a cone to radius r and height h.

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Similar triangles (cone problems)

A proportionality relationship (like r/h = constant) used to eliminate one variable so the volume can be written in terms of a single changing variable.

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Cone setup example ratio

If the full cone has radius 4 and height 12, similar triangles give r/h = 4/12 = 1/3, so r = h/3 for the water cone.

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Perpendicular motion distance relationship

If one object is x east and another is y north, the distance between them satisfies s^2 = x^2 + y^2.

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Distance-between-objects rate equation

From s^2=x^2+y^2: 2s·ds/dt = 2x·dx/dt + 2y·dy/dt, so ds/dt = (x·dx/dt + y·dy/dt)/s.

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