y=e^(2x) - x^3. Find dy/dx. (please note this is "e to the power of 2x, minus x cubed")

The rules to know are 1) when differentiating e to the power of x... be it 2x or 100x... you bring down the number in front of x, and leave the power as it is. in our case e^(2x) goes to 2e^(2x).

  1. When differentiating x to the power of something, bring the power down (here is 3) and decrease the power by one. So -x^3 goes to -3x^2. Note the minus stays for the ride all the way from the question.

Our final answer is dy/dx = 2e^(2x) -3x^2. (said as two e to the power of 2x, minus 3x squared)

TM
Answered by Toby M. Maths tutor

7997 Views

See similar Maths A Level tutors

Related Maths A Level answers

All answers ▸

Find the 12th term and the sum of the first 9 terms on the following Arithmetic Progression: a = 2 and d = 3


Let y(x) be a function with derivative y'(x)=x^2-2 and y(0) =7. What is the value of y at x = 3?


How do you go about sketching a curve when all you are given is the equation?


write 2(sin^2(x)- cos^2(x)) + 6 sin(x) cos(x) in terms of cos(2x) and sin(2x)


We're here to help

contact us iconContact ustelephone icon+44 (0) 203 773 6020
Facebook logoInstagram logoLinkedIn logo

MyTutor is part of the IXL family of brands:

© 2026 by IXL Learning