∫dx/((x^(2/3)(x+1)), integrated over [0,∞]

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Homework Statement



As in thread title.

Homework Equations



Residue Theorem.

The Attempt at a Solution



I just need help figuring out the circle C I'll be using. Suggestions?
 
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What does the presence of z2/3 tell you?
 
vela said:
What does the presence of z2/3 tell you?

Other than that there's a pole at z=0?
 
Yes, other than that. In particular, what's the effect of the fractional power?
 
vela said:
Yes, other than that. In particular, what's the effect of the fractional power?

Change the distance between z and the origin from r to r2/3
Change the angle between z and the x-axis from ø to 2ø/3
 
Right. Do you know what a branch point and a branch cut are?
 
vela said:
Right. Do you know what a branch point and a branch cut are?

Yeah, I somehow need a loop that avoid z=-1 and z=0. Right?
 
It's more that you want to avoid crossing the branch cut than avoiding z=0, and you obviously want a piece or pieces of the contour to correspond to the original integral.
 
vela said:
It's more that you want to avoid crossing the branch cut than avoiding z=0, and you obviously want a piece or pieces of the contour to correspond to the original integral.

So I'd take R>1 and make a half circle of radius R in the upper half of the plane. Then I'd make two little half circles that jump over z=-1 and z=0. Then I'd look at ∫C f(z)dz as the sum of several integrals, one of which can written as a real-valued integral and see what happens as R→∞ and the radii of the little half circles go to zero. Right?
 
  • #12
Doesn't the answer to that question depend on which way Pacman is moving?
 
  • #13
vela said:
Doesn't the answer to that question depend on which way Pacman is moving?

I forgot that PacMan is in perpetual motion.

But yeah, how am I going to do this? I need C to be formed from a series of paths, each of which will have a line integral that approaches a real value after I take some limit.
 
  • #14
Start by taking the keyhole contour and break it into four pieces and evaluate the line integral for each piece.
 
  • #15
vela said:
Start by taking the keyhole contour and break it into four pieces and evaluate the line integral for each piece.

How would that work? I want ∫f(x)dx (integrated on [0, R]) to be one of the four line integrals.
 
  • #16
That's what you're supposed to figure out. :smile: Did you understand the example on Wikipedia? That's pretty much the recipe you want to follow.
 
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