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integrating to ln (1 Viewer)

Treedom

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This might be a dumb question but evaluating

becomes this right

But if you factor out a quarter from the start to get

then it becomes

Now I'm pretty sure these answers aren't the same so I'm just very confused, is there a logarithm rule that explains this??
 

InteGrand

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This might be a dumb question but evaluating

becomes this right

But if you factor out a quarter from the start to get

then it becomes

Now I'm pretty sure these answers aren't the same so I'm just very confused, is there a logarithm rule that explains this??




 

pikachu975

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Basically this has to do with the +C you get when integrating.

For the first case, it becomes 1/4 * ln(4(x+1)) + C which then becomes 1/4 * (ln4+ln(x+1)) + C using log laws. Then from this, the C can be combined with the ln4 since ln4 is a constant, so C + 1/4 * ln4 will create a new constant, let's say D. Thus, 1/4 * ln(x+1) + D.

For the second case, 1/4 * ln(x+1) + C, here the C would be equal to the D of the first case.

SUMMARY: The ln4 gets absorbed by the constant to make a new constant.
 

Treedom

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That clears a lot of confusion, thanks so much guys!
 

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