QUESTION IMAGE
Question
find the derivative of the following function.
y = e^{-x} sin x
dy/dx = □
Step1: Apply product - rule
The product - rule states that if $y = u\cdot v$, then $y^\prime=u^\prime v + uv^\prime$. Here, let $u = e^{-x}$ and $v=\sin x$.
Step2: Find $u^\prime$
Differentiate $u = e^{-x}$ using the chain - rule. If $y = e^{f(x)}$, then $y^\prime=f^\prime(x)e^{f(x)}$. For $u = e^{-x}$, $f(x)=-x$ and $f^\prime(x)=-1$, so $u^\prime=-e^{-x}$.
Step3: Find $v^\prime$
Differentiate $v = \sin x$. The derivative of $\sin x$ with respect to $x$ is $\cos x$, so $v^\prime=\cos x$.
Step4: Substitute into product - rule
$y^\prime=u^\prime v+uv^\prime=-e^{-x}\sin x + e^{-x}\cos x=e^{-x}(\cos x-\sin x)$
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$e^{-x}(\cos x - \sin x)$