New Reply

HELP: integral of a(1-e^-bt)

 
Share Thread Thread Tools
Sep23-12, 03:57 PM   #1
 

HELP: integral of a(1-e^-bt)


Hey, just confused on how you would integrate:
a(1-e-bt)
with "a" and "b" being constants.
If you could provide steps that would be helpful.
PhysOrg.com
PhysOrg
science news on PhysOrg.com

>> Bird's playlist could signal mental strengths and weaknesses
>> Minus environment, patterns still emerge: Computational study tracks E. coli cells' regulatory mechanisms
>> Bacterium uses natural 'thermometer' to trigger diarrheal disease, scientists find
Sep23-12, 09:13 PM   #2
 
Recognitions:
Science Advisor Science Advisor
∫adt = at + C, ∫ae-bt = (-a/b)e-bt + D

where C and D are arbitrary constants. I hope you can put it together.
New Reply

Tags
calculus, exponential integral, intergral
Thread Tools


Similar Threads for: HELP: integral of a(1-e^-bt)
Thread Forum Replies
Divergence Integral doesn't equal surface integral Advanced Physics Homework 2
Does path integral and loop integral in a Feynman diagram violate special relativity? General Physics 0
Path Integral example, analysis of integral limits for K-G theory Quantum Physics 4
convert integral over phase space to integral over energy Classical Physics 0
Using polar co-ord. to change double integral into single integral involving only r. Calculus & Beyond Homework 5