Integration involving partial fraction

appplejack
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Homework Statement


I want to check the answer to this question.

⌠ 2 x dx / (x+1) (x+2)
⌡ 1

Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution


For partial fraction I got A= -1 and B = 2

My final answer is -ln 2 + ln4 - ln3 = ln 4/ ln2 * ln 3
 
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appplejack said:

Homework Statement


I want to check the answer to this question.

⌠ 2 x dx / (x+1) (x+2)
⌡ 1

Homework Equations


The Attempt at a Solution


For partial fraction I got A= -1 and B = 2

My final answer is -ln 2 + ln4 - ln3 = ln 4/ ln2 * ln 3

There is a more important question at hand. Do you understand the order of operations?
 
Last edited:
RoshanBBQ said:
There is a more important question at hand. Do you understand the order of operations?

Yes. I just need to check the answer.
 
appplejack said:
Yes. I just need to check the answer.

Judging by your problem statement, I can't be too sure.

Also, are you sure ln(a) + ln(b) = ln(a)ln(b)?
 
appplejack said:
My final answer is -ln 2 + ln4 - ln3 = ln 4/ ln2 * ln 3

This line doesn't make any sense to me. :/ Regardless, the answer is incorrect on the left hand side. Show us what integral you got when you split the partial fraction up (A=-1 and B=2 doesn't mean much if we don't know what term they are over). Then show us the anti-differentiated equation. You went wrong somewhere in there. Also, as Roshan has noticed, you don't quite seem to know how to manipulate logs.

These operations are valid: log(a)+log(b)=log(a*b); \quad log(a)-log(b)= \displaystyle log\left(\frac{a}{b}\right).

Parentheses are VERY important when typing math online. You first statement when read at face value says \displaystyle \int_1^2 \frac{x\ \ dx\ <br /> (x+2)}{x+1} which is obviously not what you meant.
 
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