Apr 14, 2011 #1 Halen Messages 13 Reaction score 0 how would you integrate (1+x^30)/(1+x^60) from 0 to 1? tried so many ways but in vain.. any help?
Apr 14, 2011 #2 Nebuchadnezza Messages 78 Reaction score 2 This is not the forum for posting course related problems. Did you try to use the substitution t=x^30 ? This should simplify your integral quite a bit. Then just do some smart algebra and factorisation. EDIT: This is wrong. Sorry for the confusion Last edited: Apr 14, 2011
This is not the forum for posting course related problems. Did you try to use the substitution t=x^30 ? This should simplify your integral quite a bit. Then just do some smart algebra and factorisation. EDIT: This is wrong. Sorry for the confusion
Apr 15, 2011 #3 JJacquelin Messages 801 Reaction score 35 Hi ! May be this can help you : Attachments Bateman integral.JPG 23.3 KB · Views: 504