View Full Version : 3 questions, help me
tomcenjerrym
Sep5-07, 11:22 AM
Hi again everyone…
I have 3 questions:
1) What is the difference between INVERSE and RECIPROCAL?
2) Does sin^−1 (u/a) equal to arc sin (u/a)?
3) What is the EASIEST way to remember that integral du / (√(a^2 − u^2)) = sin^−1 (u/a) + C or any transformation of trigonometric integration?
Thanks
1) RECIPROCAL is the INVERSE to multiplication.
2) Yes
3) Just remember it... there are far more terrifying identities -- better get used to it ;)
HallsofIvy
Sep5-07, 12:48 PM
Hi again everyone…
I have 3 questions:
1) What is the difference between INVERSE and RECIPROCAL?
It has already been pointed out that the reciprocal gives the multiplicative inverse. More generally, if f(x) is a function, its reciprocal is 1/f(x). Its inverse (if it has one) is the function f-1(x) such that f-1(f(x))= f(f-1(x))= x. The reciprocal is the inverse under the operation of multiplication, the "inverse function" is the inverse under the operation of composition of functions.
2) Does sin^−1 (u/a) equal to arc sin (u/a)?
Yes, they are different notations for the same thing (arcsin(x) is just a bit old fashioned).
3) What is the EASIEST way to remember that integral du / (√(a^2 − u^2)) = sin^−1 (u/a) + C or any transformation of trigonometric integration?
Thanks
Remember that sin2(x)+ cos2(x)= 1 so that cos2(x)= 1- sin2(x). \sqrt{a^2- u^2}= a \sqrt{1- (u/a)^2} so the substitution sin(\theta)= u/a gives cos(\theta)d\theta= (1/a)du and the integral becomes
\int \frac{du}{sqrt{a^2- u^2}}= \frac{1}{a}\int\frac{du}{\sqrt{1-(u/a)^2}}
= \int \frac{cos(\theta)d\theta}{\sqrt{1- sin^2(\theta)}}= \int d\theta= \theta+ C
Of course, since sin(\theta)= u/a, \theta= sin^{-1}(u/a).
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