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umm what

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can someone show me the working of how do we get tan (theta) when we integrate sec^2 Theta


thanks
 

nightweaver066

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Remember they're reverse processes.
 
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funnytomato

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you get sec^2 when you differentiate tan
hence you get tan when you integrate sec^2
 

deswa1

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yeah
but how do we know that the derivative of arctany= 1/(1+y^2)?
This is a good point. I don't know why you'd try and establish that the integral of sec^2(x) is tanx. Its way easier for questions of this sort to establish that the derivative of tanx is sec^2(x) as above posters have done.
 

barbernator

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the <a href="http://www.codecogs.com/eqnedit.php?latex=\delta" target="_blank"><img src="http://latex.codecogs.com/gif.latex?\delta" title="\delta" /></a> is just delta which means "change in" in greek. I thought it was the "correct" letter to be used and people just used d for ease? or am i wrong?

this is the partial derivative symbol <a href="http://www.codecogs.com/eqnedit.php?latex=\partial" target="_blank"><img src="http://latex.codecogs.com/gif.latex?\partial" title="\partial" /></a><a href="http://www.codecogs.com/eqnedit.php?latex=\partial" target="_blank"><img src="http://latex.codecogs.com/gif.latex?\partial" title="\partial" /></a>
 
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umm what

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how is the integration of sex^2 (x/2) = 2 tan (x/2)

where does the two at front come from?? :S
 

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