Timothy.Siu
Prophet 9
n=/= 0 means n cant equal 0No. that was the full question.
btw can you explain a bit more, what does " n=/=0" mean?
n=/= 0 means n cant equal 0No. that was the full question.
btw can you explain a bit more, what does " n=/=0" mean?
if you see the working first part, towards the end, you can see n in the demominator.No. that was the full question.
btw can you explain a bit more, what does " n=/=0" mean?
when doing the working you get to:No. that was the full question.
btw can you explain a bit more, what does " n=/=0" mean?
Yea, true. Thanksif you see the working first part, towards the end, you can see n in the demominator.
Thus n cannot be 0.
Drongoski, you forgot to change the limits as you made the substitution...Great effort study-freak!
Per Timothu.Siu's suggestion, for U(0):
![]()
yes.If n=0 isn't it true that U (n) becomes U (0) = S 1/ (5-4cosx) dx [ from x =0 to x= pi] ?
Drongoski, you forgot to change the limits as you made the substitution...
What can be done, is to find:
using a t-substitution and let a approach
So your integral becomes:
As a approaches, this expression approaches
![]()
i dont think he forgot, although i guess the working out is incorrect with the limits.Drongoski, you forgot to change the limits as you made the substitution...
What can be done, is to find:
using a t-substitution and let a approach
So your integral becomes:
As a approaches, this expression approaches
![]()
You know that for y = tan-1x, as x approaches infinity, y approaches π/2.How did you know this?
I don't think this works because I remember doing one integration problem in two different methods and one method gave answers like Ctan^(-1) (ktan(pi/2)) where C and k were integral, C,k>1 while the other method gave out an actual real number like pi/3 or something like that.You know that for y = tan-1x, as x approaches infinity, y approaches π/2.
Now with tan-1(3tan a/2)
as a-->π, tan a/2 --> ∞
and
3tan a/2 --> ∞
hence tan-1(3tan a/2) --> π/2
so (2/3) tan-1(3tan a/2) --> π/3
I'm pretty sure that it should work in this case. In Ctan^(-1) (ktan(pi/2)), the answer (in the limit) would be Cpi/2...The method I posted above was the evaluation step of the t-substitution.I don't think this works because I remember doing one integration problem in two different methods and one method gave answers like Ctan^(-1) (ktan(pi/2)) where C and k were integral, C,k>1 while the other method gave out an actual real number like pi/3 or something like that.
When I tried using your method to evaluate the answer from the 1st method, I failed to produce the same answer as the one I obtained using the 2nd method (which was the t method). I was sure that there was no error with other calculations and I also had others to check it. I don't remember the question so I can't post it though.
Even if the integral seems to approach (pi/3) when x approaches pi as you've stated above, pi/3 still can't be regarded as an answer can it?Drongoski, you forgot to change the limits as you made the substitution...
What can be done, is to find:
using a t-substitution and let a approach
So your integral becomes:
As a approaches, this expression approaches
![]()
It is covered in the first session of mathematics for Engineering as well.Thanks for your explanation.
btw how did you get to know all these things such as the "improper integrals"?