Function Posted February 19, 2014 Posted February 19, 2014 (edited) Hello everyone One of the example questions of the acceptance exam for Med school, is the following: (http://www.ond.vlaanderen.be/toelatingsexamen/nl/modelvragen/files/2013/modelvragen-wiskunde-2013.pdf "Vraag 7") Given: [math]\int{\frac{dx}{x}}=\ln{x}[/math] and [math]\int{\cos{x}dx}=\sin{x}[/math] Which one of the following statements is true? [math]\int{\frac{dx}{\cos{x}}}=\ln{\sin{x}}+C[/math] [math]\int{\frac{dx}{\cos{x}}}=\sin{\ln{x}}+C[/math] [math]\int{\frac{dx}{\cos{x}}}=\ln{x}+\frac{1}{\sin{x}}+C[/math] [math]\int{\frac{dx}{\cos{x}}}[/math] cannot be calculated on base of the given. The last option should be the correct one. But what about this: [math]\int{\left[1\cdot \frac{1}{\cos{x}}dx\right]}=\frac{x}{\cos{x}}-\int{\left[x d\left(\frac{1}{\cos{x}}\right)\right]}[/math] [math]\cdots = \frac{x}{\cos{x}}-\int{\left[x\cdot\sin{x}\right]}=\frac{x}{\cos{x}}-\int{\left[x\cdot d\left(-\cos{x}\right)\right]}[/math] [math]\cdots = \frac{x}{\cos{x}}+x\cdot\cos{x}+\int{\cos{x}dx}=\frac{x}{\cos{x}}+x\cdot\cos{x}+\sin{x}+C[/math] Edited February 19, 2014 by Function
studiot Posted February 19, 2014 Posted February 19, 2014 (edited) You have the right idea with your 1/1 but with the wrong part of the integral[math]I = \int {\frac{1}{{\cos x}}dx} [/math] [math] = \int {\frac{{\cos x}}{{{{\cos }^2}x}}dx} [/math] [math] = \int {\frac{{\cos x}}{{1 - {{\sin }^2}x}}dx} [/math] If we make the substitution sinx=u [math] I = \int {\frac{{du/dx}}{{1 - {u^2}}}} dx = \int {\frac{1}{{1 - {u^2}}}} du[/math]This has three different (logarithmic and trigonometric) forms. Does this help? Edited February 19, 2014 by studiot
Function Posted February 19, 2014 Author Posted February 19, 2014 You have the right idea with your 1/1 but with the wrong part of the integral [math]I = \int {\frac{1}{{\cos x}}dx} [/math] [math] = \int {\frac{{\cos x}}{{{{\cos }^2}x}}dx} [/math] [math] = \int {\frac{{\cos x}}{{1 - {{\sin }^2}x}}dx} [/math] If we make the substitution sinx=u [math] I = \int {\frac{{du/dx}}{{1 - {u^2}}}} dx = \int {\frac{1}{{1 - {u^2}}}} du[/math] This has three different (logarithmic and trigonometric) forms. Does this help? Hmm.. I understand what you're doing, but I still don't see why my reasoning wasn't all correctly: [math]\int{u\cdot v' dx}=\int{u\cdot dv} = uv-\int{v du}[/math] So why can't [math]u=\frac{1}{\cos{x}}[/math] and [math]v=x[/math]
studiot Posted February 19, 2014 Posted February 19, 2014 (edited) Because you have made d(1/cosx) in your line 1 equal to sinx in your line 2 rather than sinx/cos2x So work your integration by parts out again. Edited February 19, 2014 by studiot
Function Posted February 19, 2014 Author Posted February 19, 2014 (edited) Because you have made d(1/cosx) in your line 1 equal to sinx in your line 2 rather than sinx/cos2x So work your integration by parts out again. Ah yes, how could I've forgotten to divide by cos²x... Continuing your method, the answer would be [math]\arctan{u}+C=\arctan{\sin{x}}+C[/math] or [math]\frac{\ln{\left|u\right|}}{2u}+C=\frac{\ln{\left|\sin{x}\right|}}{2\sin{x}}+C[/math] Correct? Edited February 19, 2014 by Function
studiot Posted February 19, 2014 Posted February 19, 2014 [math]I = \int {\frac{{du}}{{1 - {u^2}}}} [/math] [math] = \frac{1}{2}\ln \frac{{1 + u}}{{1 - u}}[/math][math] = \frac{1}{2}\ln \frac{{1 + \sin x}}{{1 - \sin x}}[/math][math] = \ln |\tan \left( {\frac{\pi }{4} + \frac{x}{2}} \right)|[/math][math] = \ln |\sec x + \tan x|[/math] 1
Function Posted February 19, 2014 Author Posted February 19, 2014 [math]I = \int {\frac{{du}}{{1 - {u^2}}}} [/math] [math] = \frac{1}{2}\ln \frac{{1 + u}}{{1 - u}}[/math] [math] = \frac{1}{2}\ln \frac{{1 + \sin x}}{{1 - \sin x}}[/math] [math] = \ln |\tan \left( {\frac{\pi }{4} + \frac{x}{2}} \right)|[/math] [math] = \ln |\sec x + \tan x|[/math] (+C, of course.) Thank you.
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