Product rule for higher derivatives

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This article is about a differentiation rule, i.e., a rule for differentiating a function expressed in terms of other functions whose derivatives are known.
View other differentiation rules

Statement

This states that if f and g are n times differentiable functions at x=x0, then the pointwise product fg is also n times differentiable at x=x0, and we have:

dndxn[f(x)g(x)]|x=x0=k=0n(nk)f(k)(x0)g(nk)(x0)

Here, f(k) denotes the kth derivative of f, g(nk) denotes the (nk)th derivative of g, and (nk) is the binomial coefficient. These are the same as the coefficients that appear in the expansion of (A+B)n.

If we consider this as a general expression rather than evaluating at a given point, we get:

dndxn[f(x)g(x)]=k=0n(nk)f(k)(x)g(nk)(x)

Particular cases

Value of n Formula for dndxn[f(x)g(x)]
1 f(x)g(x)+f(x)g(x) (this is the usual product rule for differentiation).
2 f(x)g(x)+2f(x)g(x)+f(x)g(x).
3 f(x)g(x)+3f(x)g(x)+3f(x)g(x)+g(x).