How do you find the arc length of the curve y=ln x over the interval [1, 2]?

Nola Nunez

Nola Nunez

Answered question

2023-02-25

How to find the arc length of the curve y=ln x over the interval [1,2]?

Answer & Explanation

Sdunkenf9cu

Sdunkenf9cu

Beginner2023-02-26Added 5 answers

y = ln x
y = 1 x
Arc length is given by:
L = 1 2 1 + 1 x 2 d x
Rearrange:
L = 1 2 x 2 + 1 x d x
Multiply numerator and denominator by x 2 + 1 :
L = 1 2 x 2 + 1 x x 2 + 1 d x
Integration is distributive:
L = 1 2 x x 2 + 1 d x + 1 2 1 x x 2 + 1 d x
Apply the substitution x = tan θ :
L = [ x 2 + 1 ] 1 2 + sec θ tan θ d θ
Simplify:
L = 5 - 2 + csc θ d θ
Integrate directly:
L = 5 - 2 - [ ln | csc θ + cot θ | ]
Rewrite in terms of tan θ and sec θ :
L = 5 - 2 - [ ln | 1 + sec θ tan θ | ]
Reverse the substitution:
L = 5 - 2 - [ ln ( 1 + x 2 + 1 x ) ] 1 2
Insert the limits of integration:
L = 5 - 2 - ln ( 1 + 5 2 ( 1 + 2 ) )
Rearrange for clarity:
L = 5 - 2 + ln 2 - ln ( 1 + 5 1 + 2 )
daneetuhxxtj

daneetuhxxtj

Beginner2023-02-27Added 8 answers

The arc length of a function y = f ( x ) over the interval [a,b] is given by L = a b 1 + ( d y d x ) 2 d x .
y = ln x d y d x = 1 x
L = 1 2 1 + ( 1 x ) 2 d x
L = 1 2 1 + 1 x 2 d x
I will use this solution 1 + 1 x 2 d x = x 2 + 1 + 1 2 ln | x 2 + 1 - 1 x 2 + 1 + 1 | + C courtesy of mason m to find that
L = x 2 + 1 + 1 2 ln | x 2 + 1 - 1 x 2 + 1 + 1 | ] 1 2
Hence, L = 5 + 1 2 ln ( 5 - 1 5 + 1 ) - 2 - 1 2 ln ( 2 - 1 2 + 1 ) 1.222

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