sneaky pete
Member
hi
sorry im not sure which maths this is, 3unit, 4unit, or extra-curricular, so sorry about that
anyway we have
/ x^2 .dx
| sqrt(4-x^2)
/
allow x = 2sinu
dx = 2cosu du
/ 4sin^2(u) .2cosu du
| 2cos u
/
1) is the reason we cant just cancel off thos 2cos(u)'s is because at the numerator, the 2cos(u) is kind of 'connected' to the du?
2) further down in the solution, it has:
(1) 2u - 2sin(u) cos(u) + C
(2) = 2sin<sup>-1</sup>(x/2) - 1/2 x sqrt(4-x^2) + C
-where did that inverse sin come from? and just basicly how did they get from line (1) to (2) ?
thanks
sorry im not sure which maths this is, 3unit, 4unit, or extra-curricular, so sorry about that
anyway we have
/ x^2 .dx
| sqrt(4-x^2)
/
allow x = 2sinu
dx = 2cosu du
/ 4sin^2(u) .2cosu du
| 2cos u
/
1) is the reason we cant just cancel off thos 2cos(u)'s is because at the numerator, the 2cos(u) is kind of 'connected' to the du?
2) further down in the solution, it has:
(1) 2u - 2sin(u) cos(u) + C
(2) = 2sin<sup>-1</sup>(x/2) - 1/2 x sqrt(4-x^2) + C
-where did that inverse sin come from? and just basicly how did they get from line (1) to (2) ?
thanks