Integral Help: Simplifying Integration with an Arbitrary Constant

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MathNerd
Could someone please help me integrate

\int \frac { dx } { ( a + x )^2 + sin^{2} ( \pi x ) }

where a is just an arbitrary constant...

Thanks in advance...
 
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Oh my. That is ugly.

What kind of evil person is making you do that?

cookiemonster
 
The Integrator can't do it, therefore it's impossible. (I know this isn't true, but when Mathematica can't do it I get kind of scared.)

http://integrals.wolfram.com/index.en.cgi

It just spits this out: http://integrals.wolfram.com/graphics.cgi?format=StandardForm&FontSize=Medium&expr=1/Sqrt%5B%28a%2Bx%29%5E2%20%2B%20%28Sin%5BPi%2Ax%5D%29%5E2%5D
 
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Maple 8 says it cannot be done.
No answer I guess.
 
meister said:
The Integrator can't do it, therefore it's impossible. (I know this isn't true, but when Mathematica can't do it I get kind of scared.)

I can never get that to do a difficult integration when I have one. But yes this does look like a really nasty one.

Edit: I put it in and got this: http://integrals.wolfram.com/graphics.cgi?format=StandardForm&FontSize=Medium&x=24&expr=1%20/%20%28%20%28a%20%2B%20x%29%5E2%20%2B%20sin%5E2%28%28Pi%29x%29%20%29&y=21
 
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Both my version of Mathematica and the Integrator return the integral.

The first one you had, MathNerd, Mathematica could do, but this new one doesn't work out.

cookiemonster
 
Zurtex said:
I can never get that to do a difficult integration when I have one. But yes this does look like a really nasty one.

Edit: I put it in and got this: http://integrals.wolfram.com/graphics.cgi?format=StandardForm&FontSize=Medium&x=24&expr=1%20/%20%28%20%28a%20%2B%20x%29%5E2%20%2B%20sin%5E2%28%28Pi%29x%29%20%29&y=21
How do you get a sin^2 with no argument?
 
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U can calculate for certain sets of values of x where sin(pi x)=0 or 1
 
Yeah, really. The integral of a constant is a piece of cake.

cookiemonster
 
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