What is the indefinite integral of cosecant function?

In summary, the indefinite integral of cosec(\theta) is ln|csc(\theta) - cot(\theta)| + C, where C is a constant of integration. This can be found by using the u-substitution method or by using the co-functions trick.
  • #1
JamesGoh
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What is the indefinite integral of [itex]cosec(\theta)[/itex]?
 
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  • #3
[itex]cosc(x)= \frac{1}{sin(x)}[/itex].

[tex]\int cosec(x)dx= \int \frac{1}{sin(x)}dx= \int\frac{sin(x)}{sin^2(x)}dx= \int\frac{sin(x)}{1- cos^2(x)}dx[/tex].

Now let u= cos(x) so that [itex]du= -sin(x)dx[/itex].
 
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  • #4
If you know the trick to integrate ##sec(x)##, try it with the co-functions instead.
 
  • #5
Here's an alternative solution: $$\eqalign{
\int\csc x\,\mathrm dx &= \int\left(\csc x\dfrac{\csc x-\cot x}{\csc x-\cot x}\right)\mathrm dx \\
&=\int\left(\dfrac{\csc^2 x-\cot x\csc x}{\csc x-\cot x}\right)\mathrm dx.
}$$
Now use the [itex]u[/itex]-substitution [itex]u=\csc x-\cot x[/itex] and you'll get: $$\int\dfrac{1}{u}\mathrm du=\ln|u|+{\cal C}=\ln|\csc x-\cot x|+{\cal C}.$$
 

1. What is the indefinite integral of csc(x)?

The indefinite integral of csc(x) is -ln|csc(x)+cot(x)| + C

2. What is the derivative of csc(x)?

The derivative of csc(x) is -csc(x)cot(x)

3. How do you integrate csc(x) using trigonometric identities?

One way to integrate csc(x) is by using the trigonometric identity csc(x) = 1/sin(x). Then, the integral becomes 1/sin(x) dx, which can be solved using u-substitution or by rewriting it as an integral of sec(x) dx.

4. Can the integral of csc(x) be expressed in terms of elementary functions?

No, the integral of csc(x) cannot be expressed in terms of elementary functions. It must be expressed using the natural logarithm function.

5. What is the graph of the indefinite integral of csc(x)?

The graph of the indefinite integral of csc(x) is a curve that approaches infinity as x approaches 0 or π, and approaches negative infinity as x approaches π/2 or 3π/2. It also has vertical asymptotes at these points.

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