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Find the indefinite integral of each of the following by using [ f'(x)[f(x)"]dx =[ [f(x)]^n+1 / n+1] + c, where n #1

(a) e^x (3 - e^x)^4 dx
(b) 3e^2x √(1 + e²x) dx
(c) 3e^-2x / (1 + e^-2x)^3 dx
(d) 4 cos 2x sin³ 2x dx
(e) sec² 3x tan³ 3x dx
(f) 2+tan ² x / cos² x dx​

Find the indefinite integral of each of the following by using [ f'(x)[f(x)"]dx-example-1
User Kobek
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1 Answer

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Answer:

a) e^x (3 - e^x)^4 dx

Using the formula [ f'(x)[f(x)"]dx =[ [f(x)]^n+1 / n+1] + c, where n = 1,

we have:

e^x (3 - e^x)^4 dx = (e^x)^5 (3 - e^x)^4 / 5 + c

= (e^5x - 4e^4x + 6e^3x - 4e^2x + e^x) / 5 + c

b) 3e^2x √(1 + e²x) dx

Using the formula [ f'(x)[f(x)"]dx =[ [f(x)]^n+1 / n+1] + c, where n = 1,

we have:

3e^2x √(1 + e²x) dx = (3e^2x)^2 * (1 + e²x)^(3/2) / 2 + c

= (9e^4x + 3e^2x) / 2 + c

c) 3e^-2x / (1 + e^-2x)^3 dx

Using the formula [ f'(x)[f(x)"]dx =[ [f(x)]^n+1 / n+1] + c, where n = 1,

we have:

3e^-2x / (1 + e^-2x)^3 dx = -(3e^-2x)^2 / (1 + e^-2x)^2 + c

= -(9e^-4x) / (e^-4x + 2e^-2x + 1) + c

d) 4 cos 2x sin³ 2x dx

Using the formula [ f'(x)[f(x)"]dx =[ [f(x)]^n+1 / n+1] + c, where n = 1,

we have:

4 cos 2x sin³ 2x dx = -4 cos 2x (sin 2x)^4 / 4 + c

= -(cos 2x) (1 - cos 4x)^2 / 2 + c

e) sec² 3x tan³ 3x dx

Using the formula [ f'(x)[f(x)"]dx =[ [f(x)]^n+1 / n+1] + c, where n = 1,

we have:

sec² 3x tan³ 3x dx = -sec² 3x (tan 3x)^4 / 4 + c

= -sec² 3x (sec² 3x - 1)^2 / 4 + c

f) 2+tan ² x / cos² x dx

Using the formula [ f'(x)[f(x)"]dx =[ [f(x)]^n+1 / n+1] + c, where n = 1,

we have:

2+tan ² x / cos² x dx = ln|sec x| + c

It's worth noting that all these integrals are indefinite, which means that the constant c is arbitrary, and the actual antiderivative depends on the problem context.

Explanation:

User Jefelewis
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