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Evaluate the integral of the quotient of the cosine of x and the square root of the quantity 1 plus sine x, dx.

Evaluate the integral of the quotient of the cosine of x and the square root of the-example-1
User Enzio
by
8.4k points

2 Answers

6 votes

Answer:


\int{(cos(x))/(√(1+sin(x)))dx = 2√(1+sin(x))+c

Explanation:

We have the following integral:


\int{(cos(x))/(√(1+sin(x)))dx

Use the following substitution:


u = 1 + sin (x)

Remember that the derivative of
sin(x) is
cos(x)

So:


du = cos(x) dx


(du)/(cos(x)) = dx

When making this substitution, the integral remains as follows:


\int{(cos(x))/(√(u))}*(du)/(cos(x))\\\\\\\int{(1)/(√(u))}du\\\\\int u^{-(1)/(2)}du\\\\\int u^{-(1)/(2)}du=\frac{u^{-(1)/(2)+1}}{-(1)/(2)+1}=2√(u)+c

Then we have to:


\int{(cos(x))/(√(1+sin(x)))dx = 2√(1+sin(x))+c

User Rosalyn
by
8.3k points
2 votes

Answer:

∫((cos(x)*dx)/(√(1+sin(x)))) = 2√(1 + sin(x)) + c.

Explanation:

In order to solve this question, it is important to notice that the derivative of the expression (1 + sin(x)) is present in the numerator, which is cos(x). This means that the question can be solved using the u-substitution method.

Let u = 1 + sin(x).

This means du/dx = cos(x). This implies dx = du/cos(x).

Substitute u = 1 + sin(x) and dx = du/cos(x) in the integral.

∫((cos(x)*dx)/(√(1+sin(x)))) = ∫((cos(x)*du)/(cos(x)*√(u))) = ∫((du)/(√(u)))

= ∫(u^(-1/2) * du). Integrating:

(u^(-1/2+1))/(-1/2+1) + c = (u^(1/2))/(1/2) + c = 2u^(1/2) + c = 2√u + c.

Put u = 1 + sin(x). Therefore, 2√(1 + sin(x)) + c. Therefore:

∫((cos(x)*dx)/(√(1+sin(x)))) = 2√(1 + sin(x)) + c!!!

User Tron Thomas
by
8.2k points

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