After looking at my working I found a big brain substitution:Just a question. The standard way to do this integral seems to look like a page of working at least.
Any short ways?
Which gets you straight to:
After looking at my working I found a big brain substitution:Just a question. The standard way to do this integral seems to look like a page of working at least.
Any short ways?
Finding the antiderivative is very easy using a t-sub. I've shown a different way the antiderivative can be found below:It's not too hard to get the antiderivative in terms of elementary function...but the evil is in the substitution of upper and lower limits.
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Ok, thanks for the insight!Periodicity is not the cause of this trouble. If you integrate cos x, then you get sin x which is periodic. However, the substitution still works as usual.
The cause of this trouble is a different constant of integration at different intervals.
Instead of +c for all real numbers, you actually have +c0 for -pi<=x<=pi, +c1 for pi<=x<=3pi, +c2 for 3pi<=x<=5pi, etc.
Actually, the functionPeriodicity is not the cause of this trouble. If you integrate cos x, then you get sin x which is periodic. However, the substitution still works as usual.
The cause of this trouble is a different constant of integration at different intervals.
Instead of +c for all real numbers, you actually have +c0 for -pi<=x<=pi, +c1 for pi<=x<=3pi, +c2 for 3pi<=x<=5pi, etc.
This is the 2021 integration marathon thread, as i have noticed users submitting integrals on previous year's threads.
I will start off:
1/(x+x^6)
sorry for bad formatting
Let
Show all necessary working, please. V tricky.
Couldn't have asked for moreLet
where C is a constant
where
is another constant
Same adding and subtracting the same thing trick as the previous question:Try:
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let x = tan uTry:
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this method is more intuitive and quicker I reckon esp if you know what the integral of inverse tan is off by heart.Same adding and subtracting the same thing trick as the previous question:
IBP on the first integral gives:
Second integral is just reverse chain rule
So in total:![]()
This was the intended method.this method is more intuitive and quicker I reckon esp if you know what the integral of inverse tan is off by heart.