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HSC 2015 MX2 Integration Marathon (archive) (14 Viewers)

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Re: MX2 2015 Integration Marathon

Here's another recurrence question:



I'm thinking integration by parts by letting u = sin^(n-1)(x) and dv = sinxcos^2 (x)then you'll approach a step with integration of sin^(n-2)cos^4 (x) and just change cos^4(x) to (1-sin^2 (x))(cos^(2)(x)
 

Sy123

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Re: MX2 2015 Integration Marathon

 

seanieg89

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Re: MX2 2015 Integration Marathon

Here is a question that concerns inequalities arising from integration. (It is harder conceptually than most questions in this thread, but easier than a lot of them in terms of how technically demanding the required manipulations are.)



(This integral clearly blows up as approaches the unit circle. The point of the question is to quantify how quickly this happens, which is generally a useful thing to know.)
Bump. Note that the upper bound has already been proved by Integrand above.
 

Ekman

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Re: MX2 2015 Integration Marathon

Interesting Question:

 
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Re: MX2 2015 Integration Marathon

Interesting Question:

Or I'm thinking change sin2x into 2sinxcosx which then your integral becomes e^x sin(x)cos^2(x) then use IBP by letting u = e^x and dv = the rest. You then get 1/3 e^x cos^3(x) - 1/3 int e^x cos^3(x). Let the new integral be J and so J = int e^x cosx - e^x cosxsin^2(x). Then repeat IBP. lol don't have pen or paper here so can't write it down
 

VBN2470

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Re: MX2 2015 Integration Marathon

NEW QUESTION:

 

integral95

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Re: MX2 2015 Integration Marathon

I was able to do all of it but i got where does the extra 4 come from ?



when you multiply top and bottom by (2n+2)(2n)....(4)(2) you realise there are n+1 2s to factorise
 

Ekman

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Re: MX2 2015 Integration Marathon

Next Question:

 
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