expworker
Sep30-11, 01:22 PM
Hello,
I'm trying to integrate the following exponential:
\int e^{-at} e^{-b/t} dt
I can't find any solution on the mathematica website or on an integral table. I think I need to take a transform, then integrate, then transform back, but I'm not sure which transform to use. I would prefer to have an analytical result, but I don't care if the approach is either discrete or continuous.
I'm trying to integrate the following exponential:
\int e^{-at} e^{-b/t} dt
I can't find any solution on the mathematica website or on an integral table. I think I need to take a transform, then integrate, then transform back, but I'm not sure which transform to use. I would prefer to have an analytical result, but I don't care if the approach is either discrete or continuous.