Ekman
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Oct 23, 2014
- Messages
- 1,615
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2015
Woooo! Trials Complete! Time to celebrate with another integral.
is a constant.
um... my solution says it should be
um... my solution says it should be
Differentiating this in Wolfram Alpha also verifies this fact.
I have a question for you Paradoxica, it's easy but oh well:
In both questions, k is a real, non-zero constant.
Here's what I did:I have a question for you Paradoxica, it's easy but oh well:
That's what I would have done.Here's what I did:
Edit: I don't know if there's any mistakes, there might be
Here's another one inspired from the one in the 4U paper today - it's a little bit different though
Your answer doesn't even make intuitive sense. There should be a good number of surdic trigonometry terms in it, since that was present in the beginning.
Lol my bad, somehow missed including the u when replacing the dx, even though I had it when I found dx... X_XYour answer doesn't even make intuitive sense. There should be a good number of surdic trigonometry terms in it, since that was present in the beginning.
Differentiating our answers in W|A shows yours to be incorrect and mine to be correct. But don't worry, I also went down the line of missing out that extra u factor in the numerator. I stopped before I went too far though.
Done above by kawaiipotato. The other integral is similar.
...k is a real, non-zero constant.
Bump.
My answer says otherwise, but ok....Done above by kawaiipotato. The other integral is similar.
My answer says otherwise, but ok....