bigred09
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ok i have been studying the in-depth processes of trigonometric substitution with integrals and this problem has me frusterated.
\int x^2\sqrt{(x^2-4)} dx
The evaluation is clear (from an old Table of Integrals I found), but the derivation is not at all clear, which is what i want to know.
I also tried to solve this by integration by parts, but every approach ended with an even more complicated integral, so trig substitution is probably the best choice.
Can anyone help?
\int x^2\sqrt{(x^2-4)} dx
The evaluation is clear (from an old Table of Integrals I found), but the derivation is not at all clear, which is what i want to know.
I also tried to solve this by integration by parts, but every approach ended with an even more complicated integral, so trig substitution is probably the best choice.
Can anyone help?