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In mathematics, trigonometric substitution is the substitution of trigonometric functions for other expressions. One may use the trigonometric identities to simplify certain integrals containing radical expressions:
[edit] Examples[edit] Integrals containing a2 − x2In the integral we may use so that the integral becomes Note that the above step requires that a > 0 and cos(θ) > 0; we can choose the a to be the positive square root of a2; and we impose the restriction on θ to be −π/2 < θ < π/2 by using the arcsin function. For a definite integral, one must figure out how the bounds of integration change. For example, as x goes from 0 to a/2, then sin(θ) goes from 0 to 1/2, so θ goes from 0 to π/6. Then we have Some care is needed when picking the bounds. The integration above requires that −π/2 < θ < π/2, so θ going from 0 to π/6 is the only choice. If we had missed this restriction, we might have picked θ to go from π to 5π/6, which would result in the negative of the result. [edit] Integrals containing a2 + x2In the integral we may write so that the integral becomes (provided a > 0). [edit] Integrals containing x2 − a2Integrals like should be done by partial fractions rather than trigonometric substitutions. However, the integral can be done by substitution: We can then solve this using the formula for the integral of secant cubed. [edit] Substitutions that eliminate trigonometric functionsSubstitution can be used to remove trigonometric functions. For instance, (but be careful with the signs) [edit] See also |
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