integration question (1 Viewer)

Mark576

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int. sin(x0) dx = int. sin(1) dx = xsin(1) + C
 

cwag

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no..the answers are right....it means sin xdegrees.

u can only integrate when the angle is in radians...therefore you it changes to

integral: sin (pi x/180)

= -180/pi cos (pi x/180)
= or -180/pi cos x(degrees)
 

vds700

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its from a past half yearly ext 1 paper. I have scanned the sulution, I can't make sense of it (i have put an askerisk next to it). If anyone could explain it, that'd be great.
 

vds700

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cwag said:
no..the answers are right....it means sin xdegrees.

u can only integrate when the angle is in radians...therefore you it changes to

integral: sin (pi x/180)

= -180/pi cos (pi x/180)
= or -180/pi cos x(degrees)
where did you get the x from? Isn't it just the integral of sin(1 radian)?
 

cwag

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vds700 said:
where did you get the x from? Isn't it just the integral of sin(1 radian)?
no..x is in degrees....to change degrees to radians we multiply by pi/180
 

vds700

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cwag said:
no..x is in degrees....to change degrees to radians we multiply by pi/180
ah ok so you're saying its the integral of sin( x degrees)? I swear in the question, it looks like x to the power of zero.
 

cwag

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vds700 said:
ah ok so you're saying its the integral of sin( x degrees)? I swear in the question, it looks like x to the power of zero.
hmm..yea they are very similar.....but i would assume that an angle rasied to the power of 0 is very uncommon in an integratio question
 

vds700

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DownInFlames said:
OP: please clarify sin(x^0)

If you mean x degrees, you should never, ever write it like that [sin(x^0)] on the net because it means x to the power of 0. You can just use words.
it looks like a zero in the question but clearly its meant to be a degree sign
 

m&ss2008

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its very unlikely that theyll ask x^0

it does look very similar but if you look closely the degrees symbol will be rounder instead of an ellipse like zero

( o vs 0 )
:bomb:
 

Mark576

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vds700 said:
it looks like a zero in the question but clearly its meant to be a degree sign
Except he asked to find the integral of sin(x^0) lol. So my answer is correct. :ninja:Granted though, if I knew this was a question directly from an exam, I would of assumed degrees. I assumed that perhaps he stumbled upon this in his working and forgot that x^0 = 1.
 

mantiswhoprays

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i see what he's done... it is in degrees so he's turned x° into x rad. which would be π/180 x rad. go from there...

he had to change it to radians to be able to manipulate it to find the integral
 
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vds700

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Mark576 said:
Except he asked to find the integral of sin(x^0) lol. So my answer is correct. :ninja:Granted though, if I knew this was a question directly from an exam, I would of assumed degrees. I assumed that perhaps he stumbled upon this in his working and forgot that x^0 = 1.
at first I thought it was sin(x^0) (its definitely a zero, not a circle like a degere sign, obviously they put the wrong symbol in). And I do know that x^0=1.

yeah i get it how you convert to radians then integrate.... thanks guys
 

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