Onamor
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Homework Statement
Hi, this situtation arises in my cosmology lectures, but its purely mathematical:
I need to evaluate the LHS of \int \frac{da}{\sqrt{\frac{H_{0}^{2}\Omega_{0}}{a}+l^{-2}}}=dx^{0}-dx^{0}_{*}
using the substitution \frac{a}{l^{2}H^{2}_{0}\Omega_{0}}=\sin^{2}(\frac{u}{2})
Homework Equations
The answer is only possible/needed in parametric form:
a=\frac{l^{2}H^{2}_{0}\Omega_{0}}{2}(1-\cos(u))
dx^{0}-dx^{0}_{*}=\frac{l^{3}H^{2}_{0}\Omega_{0}}{2}(u-\sin(u))
The Attempt at a Solution
So first I differentiate the substitution \frac{da}{du}\frac{1}{l^{2}H^{2}_{0}\Omega_{0}}=\sin(\frac{u}{2})\cos(\frac{u}{2}) .
Then some algebra with the LHS: \int \frac{da}{\sqrt{\frac{H_{0}^{2}\Omega_{0}}{a}+l^{-2}}}=l\int \frac{da}{\sqrt{\frac{l^{2}H_{0}^{2}\Omega_{0}}{a}+1}}=l\int \frac{da}{\sqrt{\frac{1}{\sin^{2}(\frac{u}{2})}+1}}
=l\int \frac{da \sin(\frac{u}{2})}{\sqrt{1+sin^{2}(\frac{u}{2})}}}=l^{3}H^{2}_{0}\Omega_{0}\int \frac{du \sin^{2}(\frac{u}{2}) \cos(\frac{u}{2})}{\sqrt{1+sin^{2}(\frac{u}{2})}}}
Where in the last line I have used the substition. Giving me a very difficult integral which doesn't give the right answer anyway (according to Mathematica).
Any help is greatly appreciated
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