The concentration C (in milligrams per milliliter) of a drug in a patient's bloodstream t hours after injection into muscle tissue is modeled by

C =
3t/26 + t^3
Use differentials to approximate the change in the concentration when t changes from
t = 1
to
t = 1.5.
(Round your answer to four decimal places.)

see your other problem as an example. if necessary, I can check your work.

hey bobpursley i tried this one on my own but i don't get the right answer i mean if u can give me the solution i will look at it thanks

0.04938

To approximate the change in concentration (ΔC) when t changes from 1 to 1.5, we can use differentials.

First, let's find the derivative of the concentration function C(t) with respect to t. Differentiating the equation C = 3t/26 + t^3 gives us:

dC/dt = (3/26) + 3t^2

Now, we can use differentials to approximate the change in concentration. The differential form is as follows:

dC = (dC/dt) * dt

Substituting the given values t = 1 and dt = 1.5 - 1 = 0.5 into the equation, we get:

dC = [(3/26) + 3(1)^2] * 0.5
dC = (3/26) + 3 * 0.5

Calculating this approximation:

dC ≈ (3/26) + 1.5 ≈ 0.6538

Therefore, the approximate change in concentration when t changes from 1 to 1.5 is approximately 0.6538 milligrams per milliliter.