Derivatives of Inverse Functions (Except Trigonometric)
Introduction
An inverse function “undoes” the work of a function.
If $$f(x)$$ maps an input x to an output y, then its inverse function $$f^{-1}(x)$$, maps y back to .
Algebraic properties :
$$f(f^{-1}(x)) = x$$ and $$f^{-1}(f(x)) = x$$
Derivative of an Inverse Function — The Rule
If $$f(x)$$ is differentiable and has an inverse function $$f^{-1}(x)$$,
then the derivative of the inverse is given by:
Understanding the Formula
This formula means:
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To find the derivative of the inverse function at a point x, you first find the value of $$f^{-1}(x)$$,
then plug that into $$f^\prime(x)$$, and finally take its reciprocal.
Derivation of the Formula
Start from the identity:
$$f(f^{-1}(x)) = x$$
Differentiate both sides with respect to x:
$$f^\prime(f^{-1}(x)) \cdot (f^{-1})^\prime(x) = 1 $$
Solve for $$(f^{-1})^\prime(x)$$:
Example 1:
$$f(x) = e^{x}$$
The inverse is: $$f^{-1}(x) = ln(x)$$
Then: $$f^\prime(x) = e^{x}$$
By the inverse formula:
Example 2:
$$f(x) = x^{3}$$
The inverse is : $$f^{-1}(x) = \sqrt[3]{x}$$
Then:
$$f^\prime(x) = 3x^{2}$$
Using the inverse rule: