Antiderivative of Cotangent and Arcsine - Explanation Welcome

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    Antiderivative
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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around finding the antiderivatives of the cotangent and arcsine functions, exploring various methods and approaches for integration. Participants seek explanations and share their techniques, including integration by parts and substitutions.

Discussion Character

  • Homework-related
  • Mathematical reasoning
  • Technical explanation

Main Points Raised

  • One participant asks for the antiderivative of cotangent and arcsine, seeking explanations.
  • Another suggests expressing cotangent in terms of sine and cosine and using substitution for its antiderivative, while recommending integration by parts for arcsine.
  • A participant mentions using an online integrator but advises to verify the results independently.
  • One participant provides a link to Wikipedia for antiderivatives but notes that it does not contain specific information on arcsine or cotangent.
  • Another participant states that the derivative of ln(sin x) is cot x and provides a detailed integration by parts approach for arcsine.
  • A participant shares a step-by-step solution for the antiderivative of cotangent and arcsine, detailing the substitution and integration by parts methods.
  • One participant expresses gratitude for the assistance received and indicates completion of the problems.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants present various methods for finding the antiderivatives, but there is no consensus on a single approach or solution. Multiple viewpoints and techniques are shared without resolving which is the most effective.

Contextual Notes

Some participants' contributions involve assumptions about the methods used, such as the choice of substitution or the application of integration by parts, which may not be universally applicable. The discussion does not clarify all mathematical steps or dependencies on specific definitions.

mcmw
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does anyone know the antiderivative of cotangent or of arcsine? any explanation would be appreciated.
 
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Express cotangent in terms of sines and cosines and then make an appropraite substitution to find its antiderivative, use integration by parts for arcsine.
 
You can always try the Integrator. (Making sure, of course, that you triple-check the answer works before doing anything with it!)
 
cot x = d/dx [ln (sin x)]
arcsin x = d/dx [(1-x²)^½ + x*arcsin x] <--Use integration by parts
 
Last edited:
mcmw said:

does anyone know the antiderivative of cotangent or of arcsine? any explanation would be appreciated.

\int \cot x dx = \int \frac{\cos x}{\sin x} dx
Since, the power of cosine function is odd, we can let u = sin x.
(In fact, the power of sine function is also odd, so letting u = cos x should be fine as well)
u = sin x ~~~> du = cos x dx
So, the integral becomes:
\int \cot x dx = \int \frac{\cos x}{\sin x} dx = \int \frac{du}{u} = \ln |u| + C = \ln |\sin x| + C

----------------
The antiderivative of arcsin can be found by Integration by Parts:
\int \arcsin x dx
u = \arcsin x \Rightarrow du = \frac{dx}{\sqrt{1 - x ^ 2}}
dv = dx ~~~> v = x
So, your original integral will become:
\int \arcsin x dx = x \arcsin x - \int \frac{x dx}{\sqrt{1 - x ^ 2}} = x \arcsin x + \frac{1}{2} \int \frac{d \left( 1 - x ^ 2 \right)}{\sqrt{1 - x ^ 2}} = x \arcsin x + \sqrt{1 - x ^ 2} + C
 
Thank you

Thank you for the help everyone I completed the problems. :smile:
 

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