Integration (Velocity to Displacement or Position)

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around the integration of a velocity function to determine displacement or position. The velocity function is expressed in a mathematical form involving an exponential function, and participants are exploring how to properly set up and execute the integration process.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Mathematical reasoning, Problem interpretation

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants are discussing how to integrate an exponential function and are considering breaking the integral into smaller parts. There are questions about the proper setup of the integral and the handling of constants within the integrand.

Discussion Status

Some participants have offered hints about manipulating the integral and breaking it down into simpler components. There is an ongoing exchange about the correct interpretation of the integration steps, and multiple interpretations of the integration process are being explored.

Contextual Notes

Participants are required to show their work according to forum rules, which has led to discussions about the visibility of LaTeX formatting and the clarity of mathematical expressions. There is also mention of specific formatting issues that may affect understanding.

kieran1black2
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please help me with the integration in the word document.
 

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EDIT: I realize you may have work in your document, but I can't yet see it. So, if you have work in the document, ignore my lecture below:)

According to the forum rules, you must show some work to get help. What have you tried? Where are you stuck? Etc.?
 
This is the integration in LaTeX, if anyone else can't see it:

v = \frac{e^{\frac{t - 1205.525}{-100}}-142000}{30}


s = \int v dt


s = \int \frac{e^{\frac{t - 1205.525}{-100}}-142000}{30} dt


Do you know how to integrate exponential functions?


EDIT: I don't know what is up with the LaTeX, but there should be only one expression on each line. So ignore the bit after the second equals sign on the first line. And there shouldn't be an 's' after the fraction on the first line. No idea why it is doing this, there's nothing wrong with the code as I put it in.
 
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First, I would sugest splitting the integral up into as many smaller integrals as possible. HINT:e^{a+b}=e^ae^b Using this relationship, plus splitting the integral up, you should end up with two smaller, easier integrals of known forms.
 
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i have already tried that... it didnt seem to work... could you show it in latex? so i can see what I am doing wrong?
 
The 1/30 comes can "come out" of the integrand, right? And the subtraction (e to the blah minus 140000) just yields two integrals: Integral[e to the blah dt] minus Integral[142000 dt]. So that leaves the tricky part: Integral[e to the blah]. That exponent can be broken into two fairly simple expressions by going ahead and doing the division by -100... get it?
 
what i ended up with is

(e^-t/100)/(-30/100) x e^(-1205.525/-100)/t - 142000/30t

that is after integration... is that what you meant?
 

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