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HSC 2012-14 MX2 Integration Marathon (archive) (2 Viewers)

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Sy123

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Re: MX2 Integration Marathon



(After interchanging the limit and the integral, we use L'Hospitals to evaluate the inner limit.)
I'm afraid I don't understand your second step, could you please explain it?

EDIT: NVM, I get it, nice!
 
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seanieg89

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Re: MX2 Integration Marathon

I'm afraid I don't understand your second step, could you please explain it?

EDIT: NVM, I get it, nice!
Cool just saw your edit. Yep, the 1/n factor screamed L'Hospital's to me. It is not completely trivial that we can bring the limit inside the integral, but either the monotone convergence theorem or the dominated convergence theorem lets us do this just fine.
 

Sy123

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Re: MX2 Integration Marathon

A cool question my friend made



 

Sy123

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Re: MX2 Integration Marathon

Alternatively multiply top and bottom by (1-cos x) to yield 2 'standard' integrals

 

integral95

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Re: MX2 Integration Marathon

integrate sin(x^2)
Use integration by parts (lol)
I = xsin(x^2) - integral (2xcos(x^2))
let u = x^2 for the integral
final answer should be
I = xsin(x^2) - sin(x^2) + C

P.S: How do you use the latex lol
 
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Re: MX2 Integration Marathon

Use integration by parts (lol)
I = xsin(x^2) - integral (2xcos(x^2))
let u = x^2 for the integral
final answer should be
I = xsin(x^2) - sin(x^2) + C

P.S: How do you use the latex lol
2nd part of second line is wrong should be 2x^2cos(x^2)
 

Sy123

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Re: MX2 Integration Marathon

Use integration by parts (lol)
I = xsin(x^2) - integral (2xcos(x^2))
let u = x^2 for the integral
final answer should be
I = xsin(x^2) - sin(x^2) + C

P.S: How do you use the latex lol
By parts yields:



your integral had only a (2x) instead of (2x^2)

===

The integral in fact cannot be found in terms of elementary function.

====

 

Sy123

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Re: MX2 Integration Marathon

 
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