MDJH Posted August 1, 2010 Posted August 1, 2010 A math professor of mine was recommending that I go over integration techniques before doing courses involving differential equations. Since I plan on doing at least 3 such courses in the fall, (comp. mechanics, classical mechanics, and diff. eq. itself) I need to catch up on this stuff. So, I was doing some integration by parts practice problems, and I've run into trouble already. One such problem was to find the indefinite integral of LN(2x+1)dx with respect to x. So I set up u = LN(2x+1) and dv = dx, implying v = x and du = 2/(2x+1) Using the formula INT(u)dv = uv-INT(v)du, this yielded LN(2x+1)-INT(2/(2x+1))dx So for the integral within an integral, I used parts again. u = 1/(2x+1) and dv = 2dx implies du = -2dx/((2x+1)^2) and v = 2x Using the same formula, this yielded (2x)/(2x+1)-INT((2xdx)/(4x^2+4x+1)) So I tried a w-substitution. If w=4x^2+4x+1, then dw=(8x+4)dx; if it were just 8xdx I could substitute it, but that +4 part makes it seem like it would be mathematically improper. What did I do wrong?
D H Posted August 1, 2010 Posted August 1, 2010 One such problem was to find the indefinite integral of LN(2x+1)dx with respect to x. So I set up u = LN(2x+1) and dv = dx, implying v = x and du = 2/(2x+1) Correction: [math]du = \frac 2{2x+1} dx[/math]. You forgot the dx. Using the formula INT(u)dv = uv-INT(v)du, this yielded LN(2x+1)-INT(2/(2x+1))dx Look at what you wrote for u, v, and du (with my correction). Do you see the error? Once you make a mistake in an intermediate step all work from that point on is no good.
MDJH Posted August 1, 2010 Author Posted August 1, 2010 Correction: [math]du = \frac 2{2x+1} dx[/math]. You forgot the dx. Look at what you wrote for u, v, and du (with my correction). Do you see the error? Once you make a mistake in an intermediate step all work from that point on is no good. I'm guessing it was that my initial uv term was supposed to be x*Ln(2x+1) as opposed to just Ln(2x+1) itself?
D H Posted August 1, 2010 Posted August 1, 2010 That's one error. What about the [math]\int v\,du[/math] term?
Srinivasa B Posted August 9, 2010 Posted August 9, 2010 A math professor of mine was recommending that I go over integration techniques before doing courses involving differential equations. Since I plan on doing at least 3 such courses in the fall, (comp. mechanics, classical mechanics, and diff. eq. itself) I need to catch up on this stuff. So, I was doing some integration by parts practice problems, and I've run into trouble already. One such problem was to find the indefinite integral of LN(2x+1)dx with respect to x. So I set up u = LN(2x+1) and dv = dx, implying v = x and du = 2/(2x+1) Using the formula INT(u)dv = uv-INT(v)du, this yielded LN(2x+1)-INT(2/(2x+1))dx So for the integral within an integral, I used parts again. u = 1/(2x+1) and dv = 2dx implies du = -2dx/((2x+1)^2) and v = 2x Using the same formula, this yielded (2x)/(2x+1)-INT((2xdx)/(4x^2+4x+1)) So I tried a w-substitution. If w=4x^2+4x+1, then dw=(8x+4)dx; if it were just 8xdx I could substitute it, but that +4 part makes it seem like it would be mathematically improper. What did I do wrong? You have started it right. let, u = ln(2x+1), du = 2.dx/(2x+1) dv = dx, v = x now the integral will become, x.ln(2x+1) - int(2x.dx/(2x+1)) by algebraic manupulation, it will turn out to be, x.ln(2x+1) - int(dx) + int(dx/(2x+1)) which will yield: x.ln(2x+1) - x + ln(2x+1) /2 x.ln(2x+1) - x + ln(2x+1) /2 Verify your result by differentiating again.
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now