Hey, I'm brand new to calculus, so I'm probably missing something really obvious, but my textbook's answers don't show the working so I'm totally lost!
The question is: Find all the partial derivatives and the total differential of y=3x^1/3 z^2/3. The answer for the partial derivatives is fx(x,z) = x^-2/3 z^2/3, fz(x,z) = 2x^1/3 z^-1/3.
Basically I understand for fx(x,z) that the 'z^2/3' is treated as a constant, but I don't understand what happens to the constant '3' in 3x^1/3. I thought that the multiplication by a constant rule would mean that the derivative of 3x^1/3 would be 3(1x^-2/3) which is 3x^-2/3. Even if I took the derivative of the 3 seperately, wouldn't this mean it becomes 0 * x^-2/3 equalling 0?
Also for fz(x,z), I thought I should treat only x^1/3 as the constant, meaning I multiply the derivative of 3 (which is 0?) by x^1/3 z^-1/3, giving me 0? Am I wrong in treating the 3 in '3x^1/3' as a constant? How does the 3 become a 2?!
Hope this makes sense!
The question is: Find all the partial derivatives and the total differential of y=3x^1/3 z^2/3. The answer for the partial derivatives is fx(x,z) = x^-2/3 z^2/3, fz(x,z) = 2x^1/3 z^-1/3.
Basically I understand for fx(x,z) that the 'z^2/3' is treated as a constant, but I don't understand what happens to the constant '3' in 3x^1/3. I thought that the multiplication by a constant rule would mean that the derivative of 3x^1/3 would be 3(1x^-2/3) which is 3x^-2/3. Even if I took the derivative of the 3 seperately, wouldn't this mean it becomes 0 * x^-2/3 equalling 0?
Also for fz(x,z), I thought I should treat only x^1/3 as the constant, meaning I multiply the derivative of 3 (which is 0?) by x^1/3 z^-1/3, giving me 0? Am I wrong in treating the 3 in '3x^1/3' as a constant? How does the 3 become a 2?!
Hope this makes sense!