3.I.3 F3 . \mathrm{I} . 3 \mathrm{~F} \quad

Analysis II | Part IB, 2008

Explain what it means for a function f(x,y)f(x, y) of two variables to be differentiable at a point (x0,y0)\left(x_{0}, y_{0}\right). If ff is differentiable at (x0,y0)\left(x_{0}, y_{0}\right), show that for any α\alpha the function gαg_{\alpha} defined by

gα(t)=f(x0+tcosα,y0+tsinα)g_{\alpha}(t)=f\left(x_{0}+t \cos \alpha, y_{0}+t \sin \alpha\right)

is differentiable at t=0t=0, and find its derivative in terms of the partial derivatives of ff at (x0,y0)\left(x_{0}, y_{0}\right).

Consider the function ff defined by

Is ff differentiable at (0,0)(0,0) ? Justify your answer.

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