Is there any elementary function whose antiderivative contains an exact constant? Let's say we have

Lena Bell

Lena Bell

Answered question

2022-07-13

Is there any elementary function whose antiderivative contains an exact constant?
Let's say we have F ( x ) = f ( t )   d t. Now it's obvious to me why F is the class of functions whose derivative yields f(x). However, I was curious if it is possible for the antiderivative to be something such as F ( x ) = tan ( x ) + 5 + C as an example. I can see how we would merge this to become just F ( x ) = tan ( x ) + C but I'm wondering if it is possible for an elementary antiderivative to contain a constant that the entire class of antiderivatives share. My feeling is that this would never happen but I can't seem to figure out exactly why.

Answer & Explanation

billyfcash5n

billyfcash5n

Beginner2022-07-14Added 17 answers

Explanation:
No function at all has an antiderivative that contains an exact constant. This is because if you add a constant to a function, no matter what it is, the function's derivative does not change, since ( f ( x ) + g ( x ) ) = f ( x ) + g ( x and the derivative of any constant is identically zero.

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