13. Differential Notation
Differential Notation
\dot{f}(t) = \lim_{\Delta t \to 0} \frac{f(t+\Delta t) - f(t)}{\Delta t}
This "dot" notation is one of two common ways of representing the derivative.
Calculus was simultaneously invented by two people: Gottfried Wilhelm Liebniz and Isaac Newton.
And each came up with his own notation for representing derivatives. The Wikipedia article on Notation for Differentiation does a good job of explaining them thoroughly but I will summarize here.
0. What Newton and Liebniz share (d/dt)
In both notations, \frac{d}{dt} is an instruction to take the derivative. It means "Take the derivative with respect to t of whatever function shows up to the right."
When you see something like this:
You should think "the derivative of some function f with respect to t"
1. Liebniz Notation (prime)
If some variable y is a function of x we can write:
y=f(x)
The derivative of y with respect to x is given by:
\frac{dy}{dx} = f '(x)
and this could be spoken as "dee y dee x equals f prime of x"
We will not be using this notation in this Nanodegree.
2. Newton's Notation (dot)
Newton invented Calculus as a tool to help him understand motion. As a result, he was usually thinking of derivatives with respect to time (not some abstract x variable).
Likewise, his functions weren't abstract f(x)'s and g(f(x))'s. The functions he was interested in actually meant something about the physical world! He wanted to describe:
position x(t)
velocity v(t)
and acceleration a(t)
And he wanted to capture the relationships between these quantities compactly. So for Newton: differentiation with respect to time is indicated by placing a dot over the variable.
So, for example:
or for second derivatives:
A second derivative can also be represented as follows: