Help last q maths ass! (1 Viewer)

Cattle

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hey everyone i know i have already asked this and well yeh i still dont understand so if any one can explain how to do part b it would be greatly appreciated. the ass is due tomorrow

i can do part a) but i dont get the answer that is used in b) 2) a) differentiate 2x^2 +1(all over) 3x^2- 4
b) Hence evaluate integration from 0to 1 (cant figure out how to do the sign thingy on here) x (over) (3x^2- 4)^2
 

insert-username

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I don't get the answer in part b either:


2) a) differentiate 2x^2 +1(all over) 3x^2- 4
b) Hence evaluate integration from 0to 1 (cant figure out how to do the sign thingy on here) x (over) (3x^2- 4)^2



d/dx(2x2 + 1)/(3x2 - 4)

If y = u/v, then dy/dx = (vu' - uv')/v2

= [4x(3x2 - 4) - 6x(2x2 + 1)]/(3x2 - 4)2

= [12x3 - 16x - 12x3 - 6x]/(3x2 - 4)2

= -22x/(3x2 - 4)2

Differentiating using the product rule gives the same result:

d/dx(2x2 + 1)(3x2 - 4)-1

If y = uv, dy/dx = vu' + uv'

= -6x(2x2 + 1)(3x2 - 4)-2 + 4x(3x2 - 4)-1

= (3x2 - 4)-2[-12x3 - 6x + 12x3 - 16x]

= -22x/(3x2 - 4)2

I think part b is wrong. Can someone else try the differentiation, in case I've stuffed it up somewhere?


I_F
 

Riviet

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I just checked the differentiation and it's definitely correct. Part b is just... weird. Probably wrong as insert-username said. Check the question, chooke. ;)
 

Riviet

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Oh wait... i just figured it out!

x/(3x2-4)2 = -1/22[-22x/(3x2-4)2]

Now we take the integral from 0 to 1 of x/(3x2-4)2 by substituting the derivadand (the thing we were differentiating in part [a] lol, just made up that word from integrand) into -1/22[-22x/(3x2-4)2]!!
 
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