Bashyboy
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Homework Statement
[itex]\int \frac{dx}{\sqrt{x^2-4}}[/itex]
Homework Equations
The Attempt at a Solution
I tried trig-substitution, by realizing that [itex]cot\theta = \frac{4}{\sqrt{x^2-4}}[/itex]
and that [itex]-4sin\theta = dx[/itex]
My answer, though, found after the substitution and integration, is very different from the books: mine is [itex]- \frac{\sqrt{x^2-4}}{x}[/itex], theirs is [itex]ln|x+\sqrt{x^2-4}|[/itex]
How do you account for this variation?