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Integrations of Hyperbolic Functions: Theorem

The document provides information on integrating functions involving hyperbolic functions, irrational functions, and rational functions with radicals. 1. It discusses integration rules and properties for hyperbolic functions such as sinh, cosh, tanh, coth, sech, and csch. Examples are provided to demonstrate how to evaluate integrals using these properties. 2. Techniques for integrating irrational functions are presented, including using substitutions to eliminate radicals of the form (ax + b) and using trigonometric substitutions to eliminate radicals in more complex forms. 3. The technique of "completing the square" is introduced to rewrite radicals in integrals involving (Ax2 + Bx + C)1/2 in a form

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
140 views

Integrations of Hyperbolic Functions: Theorem

The document provides information on integrating functions involving hyperbolic functions, irrational functions, and rational functions with radicals. 1. It discusses integration rules and properties for hyperbolic functions such as sinh, cosh, tanh, coth, sech, and csch. Examples are provided to demonstrate how to evaluate integrals using these properties. 2. Techniques for integrating irrational functions are presented, including using substitutions to eliminate radicals of the form (ax + b) and using trigonometric substitutions to eliminate radicals in more complex forms. 3. The technique of "completing the square" is introduced to rewrite radicals in integrals involving (Ax2 + Bx + C)1/2 in a form

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Materials for week 6 (3 hours)

1. Integrations of Hyperbolic Functions

Theorem.
d du
dx
[sinh u ] = cosh u
dx
∫ cosh udu = sinh u + C
d du
dx
[cosh u ] = sinh u
dx
∫ sinh udu = cosh u + C
d du
∫ sech
2
[ tanh u ] = sech2 u udu = tanh u + C
dx dx
d du
∫ csch
2
[coth u ] = − csch2 u udu = − coth u + C
dx dx
d du
dx
[sech u ] = − sech u tanh u
dx
∫ sech u tanh udu = − sech u + C
d du
dx
[csch u ] = − csch u coth u
dx
∫ csch u coth udu = − csch u + C

Example 1 Evaluate the following integral.

∫ sinh x cosh x dx ∫ tanh x dx


5
(a) (b)
4

∫ 1 + sinh x dx ∫ cosh (5x ) dx


2 2
(c) (d)
0

Solution (a)
Use the u – substitution. Let u = sinh x ⇒ du = cosh x dx .
Hence the problem can be simplified into

∫ sinh ∫ u du
5 5
x cosh x dx =
u6
= +C
6
sinh 6 x
= +C
6
Solution (b)
sinh x
Use the identity tanh x = . Therefore the integral
cosh x
sinh x
becomes ∫ tanh x dx = ∫ dx . Use u – substitution
cosh x
method. Let u = coshh x ⇒ du = sinh x dx . Therefore we
obtain:
sinh x
∫ tanh x dx = ∫ cosh x dx
1
= ∫ du = ln u + C
u
= ln cosh x + C
Solution (c)
Use identity to rewrite the integrand:
4 4 4

∫ 0
1 + sinh2 x dx = ∫
0
cosh2 x dx = ∫
0
cosh x dx
4
= sinh x ]0
= sinh(4) − sinh(0)
= 27.2899

Solution (d)
Use identity to reduce the power of cosh x to the first degree.
The appropriate identity to consider is (from the list at the end
of the book): cosh 2x = 2 cosh2 x − 1 . Applying this identity to
our case will give us:
cosh 2(5x ) + 1 cosh(10x ) + 1
cosh2 5x = =
2 2
Hence
1 1 ⎛ sinh10x ⎞⎟
∫ cosh2 (5x ) dx =
2∫
( cosh10x + 1)dx = ⎜
2 ⎜⎝ 10
+ x
⎠⎟⎟
+C

2
2. Integration of Irrational Functions
12
2.1 Integrals involving (ax + b)
Generally, if an integrand contains only one irrational
expression of the form ax + b , we can use the substitution
z 2 = ax + b to simplify it.

Example 2 Evaluate the following integrals


x
(a) ∫ x 1 + x dx (b) ∫
1+x
dx

Solution (a)
Let z 2 = x + 1 then 2zdz = dx . From our substitution, we have
x = z 2 − 1 . Thus we obtain the following expression for the
integrand: x 1 + x = (z 2 − 1) z = z 3 − z . Since 2zdz = dx we
have

∫x ∫ 2z (z − z )dz
3
1 + x dx =

= 2∫ (z − z )dz
4 2

⎛ z 5 z 3 ⎞⎟
= 2 ⎜⎜ − ⎟⎟ + C
⎜⎝ 5 3⎠
Re substituting into x variable we obtain:
⎛(x + 1)5 2 (x + 1)3 2 ⎞⎟
= 2 ⎜⎜ − ⎟⎟ + C
⎜⎝ 5 3 ⎠⎟

3
Solution (b)
Similarly with like substitution we obtain:
x z2 −1
∫ 1 + x dx = ∫ z 2z dz
= 2∫ (z 2 − 1) dz
⎛z 3 ⎞
= 2 ⎜⎜ − z ⎟⎟⎟ + C
⎝⎜ 3 ⎠
⎛(x + 1)3 2 1 2⎞

= 2⎜ − (x + 1) ⎟⎟⎟ + C
⎜⎝ 3 ⎠⎟

4
2.2 Trigonometric Substitution
This technique is applied on integrands with radicals. The
purpose is to eliminate the radical thus simplifying the
integrand.
Table 1
Expression Substitution
x2 + k2 x = k tan θ
x2 − k2 x = k sec θ
k2 − x2 x = k sin θ
The basic purpose: eliminate the radical.
Consider the first substitution suggested for the first radical.
See what happen when we apply the substitution.
2
x 2 + k 2 = (k tan θ ) + k 2 = k tan2 θ + 1 = k sec θ
The resulting expression has no radical.
x 2 − 25
Example 3 Evaluate ∫ x
dx , assuming x ≥ 5 .

Solution
The integrand involves a radical of the form x 2 − k 2 with
k = 5 . From the table, the suggested substitution is x = 5 sec θ .
With the substitution we obtain:
x = 5 sec θ , and dx = 5 sec θ tan θ d θ
Therefore,
x 2 − 52 = 52 sec2 θ − 52
= 52 (sec2 θ − 1)

= 5 tan2 θ
= 5 tan θ

5
With x = 5 sec θ and dx = 5 sec θ tan θ d θ the integral becomes:
x 2 − 25 (5 tan θ )(5 sec θ tan θ )
∫ x
dx = ∫
5 sec θ

= 5∫ tan2 θ d θ

= 5∫ (sec2 θ − 1) d θ
= 5 tan θ − 5θ + C

Our next step is to express the solution in terms of x. To do


that we represent the substitution x = 5 sec θ geometrically by
the triangle below:

From the triangle we obtain:


x 2 − 52 ⎛x ⎞
x 2
x −5 2
tan θ = and θ = sec−1 ⎜⎜ ⎟⎟
5 ⎝5⎠
θ
5
Therefore we have:
x 2 − 25 ⎛x ⎞
∫ dx = x 2 − 25 − 5 sec−1 ⎜⎜ ⎟⎟ + C
x ⎝5⎠

6
12
2.3 Integrals involving (Ax 2 + Bx + C )
The trigonometric substitutions can be extended and applied to
integrals involving radicals with quadratic radicands.

Objectives:
12
1. To change the expression (Ax 2 + Bx + C ) to any of the
following forms:
(ax + b)2 + k 2 , (ax + b)2 − k 2 , or k 2 − (ax + b)2
2. To apply trigonometric substitution to solve the integral

To achieve the first objective, we apply a technique called


‘completing the square’:
2
⎛ b ⎞⎟ b 2 − 4ac
Given ax + bx + c = 0 , then ⎜⎜x + ⎟⎟ =
2
⎝ 2a ⎠ 4a 2
The purpose of this is to rewrite the radicand in a form that
matches the expression that can use trig substitution. Once it
is in this form, we apply the techniques of trigonometric
substitutions.
Table 2
Expression Substitution
2
(ax + b ) + k 2 ax + b = k tan θ
2
(ax + b ) − k 2 ax + b = k sec θ
2
k 2 − (ax + b ) ax + b = k sin θ

7
Example 4 Evaluate the following integrals.
x −2 x
(a) ∫ 2
x − 4x + 8
dx (b) ∫ 3 + 2x − x 2
dx

Solution (a) Complete the square:


x −2 x −2
∫ x 2 − 4x + 8 dx = ∫ (x − 2)2 + 4 dx
From Table 2, the appropriate substitution is:
x − 2 = 2 tan θ from which we obtain dx = 2 sec2 θd θ
Therefore the integrals becomes
x −2 2 tan θ (2 sec2 θ )
∫ 2
(x − 2) + 4
dx = ∫ (2 tan θ ) + 4
2

2 tan θ (2 sec2 θ )
= ∫ 2
2 tan θ + 1

2 tan θ (2 sec2 θ )
= ∫ 2 sec θ 2

2 tan θ (2 sec2 θ )
= ∫ 2 sec θ

= 2∫ tan θ sec θ d θ
= 2 sec θ + C
Express solution in terms of x:

2
(x − 2) + 4 x–2

θ
2
x −2

2
∴ dx = (x − 2) + 4 + C
x 2 − 4x + 8

8
Solution (b) Complete the square
x x
∫ 3 + 2x − x 2 dx = ∫ 4 − (x − 1)2 dx
Substitution: x − 1 = 2 sin θ ⇒ dx = 2 cos θ d θ . Therefore we
have:
x (1 + 2 sin θ ) 2 cos θ
∫ 2
4 − (x − 1)
dx = ∫ 4 − (2 sin θ )
2

(1 + 2 sin θ ) 2 cos θ
= ∫ 2 (1 − sin θ ) 2

(1 + 2 sin θ ) 2 cos θ
= ∫ 2 cos θ 2

(1 + 2 sin θ ) 2 cos θ
= ∫ 2 cos θ

= ∫ (1 + 2 sin θ ) d θ
= θ − 2 cos θ + C
Express in terms of x:

2 x-1

θ
2
4 − (x − 1)

x −1 ⎛ x − 1 ⎞
∴ ∫ dx = sin ⎜⎜ ⎟⎟ − 4 − (x − 1)2 + C
3 + 2x − x 2 ⎝ 2 ⎠

9
Materials for week 6 (3 hours)

3. Differentiation of Inverse Trigonometric Functions

3.1 The Functions

1 2

1.5

0.5 1
y=sin x y=arcsin x
0.5

0 0

-0.5

-0.5 -1

-1.5

-1 -2
-2 -1 0 1 2 -1 -0.5 0 0.5 1

Function Domain Range


y = sin−1 x ⇔ sin y = x [-1, 1] [ −2π , π2 ]
y y
4 1.5
3
1
2
y=tan x 0.5
1 y=arctan x

0 x 0 x
-1
-0.5
-2
-1
-3

-4 -1.5
-1 -0.5 0 0.5 1 -4 -2 0 2 4

Function Domain Range


y = tan−1 x ⇔ tan y = x (−∞, ∞) [ −2π , π2 ]

11
Function Domain Range
y = sec−1 x ⇔ sec y = x (−∞, −1] ∪ [1, ∞) [0, π2 ) ∪ ( π2 , π ]

12
Materials for week 6 (3 hours)

3.2 Important identities


π
i. sin−1 x + cos−1 x =
2
π
ii. tan−1 x + cot−1 x =
2
π
iii. sec−1 x + cosec−1 x =
2

3.3 Differentiation
d ⎡ −1 ⎤ 1 du
i. sin u = ,u <1
dx ⎣ ⎦
1−u 2
dx
d ⎡ −1 ⎤ 1 du
ii. tan u =
dx ⎣ ⎦ 1 + u 2 dx
d ⎡ −1 ⎤ 1 du
iii. sec u = ,u >1
dx ⎣ ⎦
u u 2 − 1 dx

Example 5
Differentiate the following expressions with respect to x.
sin−1( x )

Solution
du 1 du 1
Let u = x , then = (x )−1/ 2 , → =
dx 2 dx 2 x

d ⎡ −1 1 ⎛ 1 ⎞⎟ 1
∴ sin x ⎤= ⎜⎜ ⎟ =
dx ⎣ ⎦
1−( x )
2 ⎝ 2 x ⎠⎟ 2 x − x2
Example 6
Differentiate the following expressions with respect to x.
1
tan−1 x

Solution
d ⎡ 1 ⎤ d ⎡(tan−1 x )−1 ⎤
∴ ⎢ −1 ⎥
= ⎢⎣ ⎥⎦
dx ⎢⎣ tan x ⎥⎦ dx
−2 ⎡ 1 ⎤
= (−1) ⎡⎢(tan−1 x ) ⎤⎥ ⎢ ⎥
⎣ ⎦ ⎢⎣ 1 + x 2 ⎥⎦
−1
= 2
(tan−1 x ) ⎡⎣1 + x 2 ⎤⎦

Example 7
Differentiate y with respect to x.
y = sin(tan−1 2x )

Solution
dy d ⎡
= ⎣ sin(tan−1 2x )⎤⎦
dx dx

To help us solve the problem we are going to do a few


substitutions to simplify the expression:

Let u = 2x , and let w = tan−1 u ⇒ y = sin(w ) .


We want to find
dy dy dw
= i
dx dw dx

14
Now
dy
= cos w
dw
and
dw dw du
= i
dx du dx
dw 1 du
where = and =2
du 1 + u2 dx

dw dw du 2 2
∴ = i = = 2
dx du dx 1 + u2 1 + (2x )

Hence
⎛ 2 ⎞⎟ 2 cos ⎡⎣ tan (2x )⎤⎦
−1
dy dy dw
= i = [ cos w ]⎜⎜ ⎟=
dx dw dx ⎝1 + 4x 2 ⎠⎟ 1 + 4x 2

15
4. Integrations of Inverse Trigonometric Functions

1 u
i) ∫ a2 − u2 du = sin−1
a
+C
1 1 u
ii) ∫ 2 2
du = tan−1 + C
a +u a a
1 1 −1 u
iii) ∫ du = sec +C
2
u a −u 2
a a

dx
Example 8 Evaluate ∫ 9 + 4x 2
Solution
dx dx
Rewrite ∫ 9 + 4x 2
as ∫ 32 + (2x )
2 .

Use substitution to simplify expression:


du
Let a = 3 and u = 2x , ∴ du = 2dx , or = dx .
2

dx 1 du
∫ 32 + (2x )
2 =
2 ∫ a 2 + (u )2
1 ⎛1 u⎞
= ⎜⎜ tan−1 ⎟⎟ +C
2 ⎝a a⎠
1 ⎛1 2x ⎞ 1 2x
= ⎜⎜ tan−1 ⎟⎟ +C = tan−1 +C
2 ⎝3 3⎠ 6 3

Example 9
dx
Evaluate ∫ 3 + 2x − x 2

16
Solution
Complete the squares:
3 + 2x − x 2 = −(x 2 − 2x − 3)
= − ⎡⎣(x − 1)2 − 3 − 1⎤⎦
= − ⎡⎣(x − 1)2 − 4⎤⎦
= − ⎡⎣(x − 1)2 − 22 ⎤⎦ = ⎡⎣22 − (x − 1)2 ⎤⎦

dx dx
∴ ∫ 3 + 2x − x 2
= ∫ 22 − (x − 1)2

Use substitutions:
Let a = 2 and u = x − 1, ∴ du = dx

dx du u
∴ ∫ 2 − (x − 1)2
= ∫ a2 − u2
= sin−1
a
+C

x −1
= sin−1 +C
2

Example 10
sin−1 2x
Evaluate ∫ 1 − 4x 2
dx .

Solution
du 2 du dx
Let u = sin−1 2x , then = or = .
dx 1 − 4x 2 2 1 − 4x 2

17
Hence we have
sin−1 2x 1
∫ 1 − 4x 2
dx =
2 ∫ udu
2
u2
(sin−1 2x )
= = +C
4 4

Example 11

∫ sin
−1
Evaluate x dx .

Solution
Use the integration-by-parts method. Let
u = sin−1 x and dv = dx
dx
du = 2
and v = x
1−x

Thus we obtain
x
∫ sin−1 x dx = x sin−1 x − ∫
1−x 2
dx

= x sin−1 x − 1 − x 2 +C

18

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