How Do You Integrate ∫arcsin(2x²)dx Correctly?

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around the integration of the function ∫arcsin(2x²)dx, which has been presented in the context of a Calculus 2 exam. Participants are exploring the complexities involved in solving this integral, particularly focusing on integration techniques and potential errors in the problem statement.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Assumption checking, Problem interpretation

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss using integration by parts and trigonometric substitution as potential methods for solving the integral. There is uncertainty regarding the correct formulation of the integral, with some suggesting it may have been miswritten. Others mention the possibility of the integral leading to elliptic functions, indicating a higher level of complexity.

Discussion Status

The discussion is ongoing, with multiple interpretations of the original problem being explored. Some participants express confidence in the problem as stated, while others question its validity and suggest that it may contain a typo. There is a mix of attempts to clarify the integral and explore various solution strategies.

Contextual Notes

Participants note that there is confusion regarding the exact formulation of the integral, with some suggesting alternative expressions. The context of an exam question adds pressure, as several participants indicate that it was a significant part of their assessment.

Kiwiro0ls
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Just got out of a Calculus 2/ Lineal Algebra exam and I am still wondering about the first question:
∫arcsin(2×2)dx

I used integration by parts letting u=arcsin(2×2) and so du=dx/sqrt[1-4x4], v=x

=xarcsin(2×2) - ∫[x/sqrt[1-4x4]dx

this second integral is what I can´t solve.

I tried doing trigonometric substitution where sin∅=2x2, and then later used a trig identity to integrate... but I really think I messed up somewhere.

If anyone out there has any clue, its much appreciated! :)
 
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If the second integral WERE ∫[x/sqrt[1-4x^4]dx, you could just substitute w=x^2 which would then give you arcsin again.
However, du=dx 4x/sqrt[1-4x4] (chain rule) so that the integral you actually have to solve becomes ∫[4x^2/sqrt[1-4x^4]dx which, according to wolfram alpha has a complicated solution involving elliptic integrals.
Maybe you are missing a factor in the question?
 
No I am very very very sure this is the question,
there's some talk amongst the class that it was typed wrong or something, apparently no one got those 15pts...
anyway, I am still out of ideas and trying at it!
 
Kiwiro0ls said:
Just got out of a Calculus 2/ Lineal Algebra exam and I am still wondering about the first question:
∫arcsin(2×2)dx

I used integration by parts letting u=arcsin(2×2) and so du=dx/sqrt[1-4x4], v=x

=xarcsin(2×2) - ∫[x/sqrt[1-4x4]dx

this second integral is what I can´t solve.

I tried doing trigonometric substitution where sin∅=2x2, and then later used a trig identity to integrate... but I really think I messed up somewhere.

If anyone out there has any clue, its much appreciated! :)
Are you sure it wasn't something like \displaystyle \int x\ \arcsin(2x^2)\,dx\ ?
 
Nope D: I am 100% sure it was ∫arcsin (2x^2)dx
 
Kiwiro0ls said:
Nope D: I am 100% sure it was ∫arcsin (2x^2)dx

Err I'm surprised a question like that would show up, but you can use the fact that :

\int_{}^{}arcsin(2x^2)dx = \int_{}^{}\frac{\pi}{2} - arccosxdx = \frac{\pi}{2}x - xarccosx + \sqrt{1-x^2} + c
 
Zondrina said:
Err I'm surprised a question like that would show up, but you can use the fact that :

\int_{}^{}arcsin(2x^2)dx = \int_{}^{}\frac{\pi}{2} - arccosxdx = \frac{\pi}{2}x - xarccosx + \sqrt{1-x^2} + c

Wouldn't it be ##\int \arcsin(2x^2)\, dx = \int\frac \pi 2 -\arccos(2x^2)\, dx##?
 
So
=xarcsin(2x2)-4∫[x2dx/sqrt(1-4x4)]
and that's what I am trying to solve
 
Looks like a valid problem for trigonometric substitution, particularly the 1/sqrt(...).
 
  • #10
Beats me why this thread is still alive. As has already been pointed out, the solution involves elliptic functions and no "standard" calculus technique is going to work it. It is pretty obvious that if that was intended, the problem has a typo.
 
  • #11
oh well :´(
 

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