• Want to take part in this year's BoS Trials event for Maths and/or Business Studies?
    Click here for details and register now!
  • YOU can help the next generation of students in the community!
    Share your trial papers and notes on our Notes & Resources page

The Logic Behind Integration by Sustitution (2 Viewers)

untouchablecuz

Active Member
Joined
Mar 25, 2008
Messages
1,693
Gender
Male
HSC
2009
I know how to integrate by substitution, but I don't really understand why it works? How do we break up du/dx? Why does the method work? I've always thought that du RELIES on dx etc etc. Any help would be appreciated.
 

lolokay

Active Member
Joined
Mar 21, 2008
Messages
1,015
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
2009
you're just putting an integral that you can't identify how to solve into a form you can

maybe if you give an example, it could help us explain clearly why it works
 

Trebla

Administrator
Administrator
Joined
Feb 16, 2005
Messages
8,299
Gender
Male
HSC
2006
untouchablecuz said:
I know how to integrate by substitution, but I don't really understand why it works? How do we break up du/dx? Why does the method work? I've always thought that du RELIES on dx etc etc. Any help would be appreciated.
Integration by substitution is basically a method of SIMPLIFYING the integral.
A simple example:
∫ 2x(1 + x²)² dx = (1 + x²)³ / 3 + c
because it is obvious that when you differentiate , (1 + x²)³ a 2x must pop out because of the chain rule and the 3 comes out in front. However, since there is no 3 in the integrand, we have to divide the primitive by 3 to maintain equality.

So one way to rewrite this is if f(x) = (1 + x²) with f'(x) = 2x, then
2x(1 + x²)² dx =∫ f'(x) [f(x)]² dx = [f(x)]³ / 3 + c
Notice that if we differentiate [f(x)]³ / 3 we get 3[f(x)]² f'(x) / 3 = [f(x)]² f'(x) which is the original integrand.

Integration by substitution follows that very same principle but instead of f(x), it is commonly written as u.
u = (1 + x²) {this is f(x)}
du/dx = 2x {this is f'(x)}

So instead of ∫ f'(x)[f(x)]² dx we write it as:
2x(1 + x²)² dx = ∫ (du/dx) u² dx
= ∫ u² du
= u³ / 3 + c
= (1 + x²)³ / 3 + c
 
Last edited:

3unitz

Member
Joined
Nov 18, 2006
Messages
161
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
N/A
∫ (1 - x^2)^(1/2) dx

using the substitution x = sin u

what happens to the absolute signs on cos u?
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 2)

Top