Question:

For a twice continuously differentiable function š‘”: ā„ → ā„, define
\(u_g(x,y)=\frac{1}{y}\int^y_{-y}g(x+t)dt\ \ \ \text{for}(x,y)\in \R^2, \ \ \ y \gt0.\)
Which one of the following holds for all such š‘” ?

Updated On: Nov 17, 2025
  • \(\frac{āˆ‚^2u_g}{āˆ‚x^2}=\frac{2}{y}\frac{āˆ‚u_g}{āˆ‚y}+\frac{āˆ‚^2u_g}{āˆ‚y^2}\)
  • \(\frac{āˆ‚^2u_g}{āˆ‚x^2}=\frac{1}{y}\frac{āˆ‚u_g}{āˆ‚y}+\frac{āˆ‚^2u_g}{āˆ‚y^2}\)
  • \(\frac{āˆ‚^2u_g}{āˆ‚x^2}=\frac{2}{y}\frac{āˆ‚u_g}{āˆ‚y}-\frac{āˆ‚^2u_g}{āˆ‚y^2}\)
  • \(\frac{āˆ‚^2u_g}{āˆ‚x^2}=\frac{1}{y}\frac{āˆ‚u_g}{āˆ‚y}-\frac{āˆ‚^2u_g}{āˆ‚y^2}\)
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The Correct Option is A

Solution and Explanation

To determine which given equation holds for the defined function \( u_g(x, y) \), we begin by calculating the partial derivatives of \( u_g \). The function \( u_g \) is given as:

\(u_g(x,y) = \frac{1}{y} \int_{-y}^{y} g(x+t)\,dt \)

Steps:

  1. First, find the partial derivative of \( u_g \) with respect to \( x \):
  2. Now, differentiate again with respect to \( x \) to find \( \frac{\partial^2 u_g}{\partial x^2} \):
  3. Next, calculate the partial derivative of \( u_g \) with respect to \( y \):
  4. Differentiate the expression for \( \frac{\partial u_g}{\partial y} \) with respect to \( y \) to find \( \frac{\partial^2 u_g}{\partial y^2} \):
  5. To show that the relationship \( \frac{\partial^2 u_g}{\partial x^2} \) equals the right expression, substitute the derived formulas in the options and simplify:

Hence, the correct option is: \(\frac{āˆ‚^2u_g}{āˆ‚x^2}=\frac{2}{y}\frac{āˆ‚u_g}{āˆ‚y}+\frac{āˆ‚^2u_g}{āˆ‚y^2}\).

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