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Need help on this calculus

Need help on this calculus-example-1
User Lung
by
7.0k points

1 Answer

3 votes

\displaystyle\int\sin^3t\cos^3t\,\mathrm dt

One thing you could do is to expand either a factor of
\sin^2t or
\cos^2t, then expand the integrand. I'll do the first.

You have


\sin^2t=1-\cos^2t

which means the integral is equivalent to


\displaystyle\int\sin t(1-\cos^2t)\cos^3t\,\mathrm dt

Substitute
u=\cos t, so that
\mathrm du=-\sin t\,\mathrm dt. This makes it so that the integral above can be rewritten in terms of
u as


\displaystyle-\int(1-u^2)u^3\,\mathrm du=\int(u^5-u^3)\,\mathrm du

Now just use the power rule:


\displaystyle\int(u^5-u^3)\,\mathrm du=\frac16u^6-\frac14u^4+C

Back-substitute to get the antiderivative back in terms of
t:


\frac16\cos^6t-\frac14\cos^4t+C
User Mike Gottlieb
by
6.2k points
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