Integrating Inverse Trigonometric Functions: How to Solve for 1/(sin^2x)?

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Homework Statement



25\int\frac{1}{sin^{2}x}dx

The Attempt at a Solution



I wasn't sure if I could change \frac{1}{sin^{2}x} to Csc^{2}x but when I did I ended up with -25Cotx which when I checked the integral in my calculator and it was wrong. So now I'm lost...
 
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FYI, the original problem was \int\frac{1}{x^{2}\sqrt{25-x^{2}}}dx I used trigonometric substitution to get to the problem above.
 
Well in an online integral table I found that \int \csc^2 ax dx = -\frac{1}{a} \cot ax + C so you should probably come up with -\frac{cot(25x)}{25} + C.
 
-25Cot(x) is the integral of 25/sin^2(x), you can check it by computing the derivative.
 
Well did I go wrong before I got to the sin integral? because when I checked it against the original problem it didn't match.
 
Oh I did catch that it should be 1/25 not 25. But its still slightly off.
 
Judging from what you've shown us, you used the substitution x=5*sin(u) to reduce the integral to (1/25) times the integral (1/sIn(u)^2)*du. That's fine. So you've got -cot(u)/25 as the integral. You still have to express that in terms of x.
 
I substituted \frac{\sqrt{25-x^{2}}}{x} for cot So what I end up with is -\frac{\sqrt{25-x^{2}}}{25x}+c
 
That looks fine to me.
 
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