lo2
I find this one tough so could anyone please help me solving this intregral:
\int{\sqrt{x^2-1}}dx
I would like the procedure.
\int{\sqrt{x^2-1}}dx
I would like the procedure.
Robokapp said:I've seen this before. Ok first keep in mind that you are integrating a semicircle...so...you can cheat and just geometrically find the area...or you can use a u-substitution.
Robokapp said:In "conic Sections" you learn this as being a hyperbola. It would be a circle if it had a +. But you only deal with half of it so circle or hyperbola is same thing...the answer would be in terms of Pi but integrals are not exact either...
lo2 said:I find this one tough so could anyone please help me solving this intregral:
\int{\sqrt{x^2-1}}dx
I would like the procedure.
tieu said:ummm has any 1 solved it. if not isn't it just
1/3 * 1/(2x) (x^2 - 1)^(3/2)
= 1/(6x)(x^2 - 1)^(3/2)
correct me if I am wrong :)
VietDao29 said:There's another way though...
Ok, can you get it? :)
Yes, I agree to your opinion. Using cosh, or sinh substitution is much faster. However, what if the OP hasn't learned hyperbolic functions?uart said:Well if you look at what you've done it really was pretty much the same as what I did. Only the first step in your solution {to get the integral of 1/sqrt(x^2+a) } was different. But personally I prefer to use a sinh or cosh substitution (as appropriate depending on the sign of "a") to do that one. I think it's easier.
Robokapp said:Now the way you form a circle...or a hyperbola is by having 2 parabolas. Correct? Well here we have one...so it can be a part of a circle or of a hyperbola. It doesn't matter because the other part is not something we are looking at.
So by considering half of a hyperbola...wouldn't we consider a parabola?
And does that parabola not look like ... a parabola that would form a circle if theere would be its negative counterpart?
All I'm trying to do (i know i go way too far and I'm sorry for that) is try to set it up in terms of Pi. I don't know anything about hyperbolas. I don't even know if they have areas. I don't know if parabolas do either...but i know circles and semicircles do. I'm just relating it to something I can work with.
Robokapp said:I am not writing gibberish on purpose...when I write my paragraphs I am sure that what I say is at least worth reading. I'm being told it's not, and I'm trying to fix that, by asking questions which create more confusion.
Now how is a parabola a half circle part:
-Edited-
I worked the math...I was saying a big stupidity. I feel awful now... I was not doing an operation to both sides of the equal as I should have. I was getting one power less on y.
Could have been mine. I had posted (or thought I did anyway), but I guess it was deleted as being off-topic.d_leet said:I could have sworn there was another post here this morning in response to mine,
WhyIsItSo said:Could have been mine. I had posted (or thought I did anyway), but I guess it was deleted as being off-topic.