Spotting substitution in &#x222B;<!-- ∫ --> 1 ( t + c

Nicholas Cruz

Nicholas Cruz

Answered question

2022-05-20

Spotting substitution in 1 ( t + cos α ) 2 + sin 2 α

Answer & Explanation

Julien Carrillo

Julien Carrillo

Beginner2022-05-21Added 13 answers

HINT:
1 ( t + cos ( a ) ) 2 + sin 2 ( a )   d t =
Substitute u = cos ( a ) + t and du=dt:
1 sin 2 ( a ) + u 2   d u =
csc 2 ( a ) u 2 csc 2 ( a ) + 1   d u =
csc 2 ( a ) 1 u 2 csc 2 ( a ) + 1   d u =
Substitute s=ucsc(a) and ds=csc(a) du:
csc ( a ) 1 s 2 + 1   d s
Trevor Wood

Trevor Wood

Beginner2022-05-22Added 5 answers

Factoring gives
1 sin 2 α d t ( t csc α + cot α ) 2 + 1 ,
so that the denominator of the integral has the familiar form v 2 + 1. This suggests writing
t csc α + cot α = v = tan u ,
and multiplying both sides of this substitution by sinα gives the desired substitution:
sin α tan u = t + cos α .

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