Higher derivative

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Definition

Terminology

Higher derivatives are also called repeated derivatives or iterated derivatives.

Function and prime notation

Suppose is a function and is a nonnegative integer. The derivative of , denoted where occurs a total of times, is defined as the function obtained by differentiating a total of times (i.e., taking the derivative, then taking the derivative of that, and so on, a total of times). The first few cases are shown explicitly:

Value of Notation with repeated primes for notation Definition In words
0 the original function
1 the derivative, also called the first derivative
2 the second derivative
3 the third derivative

We could also define the derivative inductively as:

or as:

with the base case .

Leibniz notation

Suppose , so is a dependent variable depending on , the independent variable. The derivative of with respect to is denoted:

or as:

and is defined as:

Failed to parse (SVG (MathML can be enabled via browser plugin): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/":): {\displaystyle \! \frac{d^ky{dx^k} = \frac{d}{dx}\left[\frac{d}{dx} \left[ \dots \left[\frac{d}{dx}(y)\right] \dots \right] \right]}

where the occurs times. Alternatively we can define it inductively as:

with the base case being defined as .