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| |Use a ''u''-substitution with <math style="vertical-align: -8%">u = 3x + 2.</math> This means <math style="vertical-align: 0%">du = 3\,dx</math>, or <math style="vertical-align: -20%">dx=du/3</math>. After substitution we have | | |Use a ''u''-substitution with <math style="vertical-align: -8%">u = 3x + 2.</math> This means <math style="vertical-align: 0%">du = 3\,dx</math>, or <math style="vertical-align: -20%">dx=du/3</math>. After substitution we have |
− | ::<math>\int \frac{1}{3x + 2} \,=\, \int \frac{1}{u}\,\frac{du}{3}\,=\,\frac{1}{3}\int\frac{1}{u}\,du.</math> | + | ::<math>\int \frac{1}{3x + 2}\,dx \,=\, \int \frac{1}{u}\,\frac{du}{3}\,=\,\frac{1}{3}\int\frac{1}{u}\,du.</math> |
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Revision as of 06:44, 16 May 2015
Find the antiderivative of
Foundations:
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This problem requires two rules of integration. In particular, you need
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Integration by substitution (u - sub): If is a differentiable functions whose range is in the domain of , then
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We also need the derivative of the natural log since we will recover natural log from integration:
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Solution:
Step 1:
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Use a u-substitution with This means , or . After substitution we have
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Step 2:
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We can now take the integral remembering the special rule:
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Step 3:
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Now we need to substitute back into our original variables using our original substitution
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to find
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Step 4:
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Since this integral is an indefinite integral we have to remember to add a constant Failed to parse (MathML with SVG or PNG fallback (recommended for modern browsers and accessibility tools): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/":): {\displaystyle C}
at the end.
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Final Answer:
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