Trigonometric functions and integrals

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The integral that results in arccos(u) is typically expressed as -arcsin(u) + C, reflecting the relationship between the two functions. Both arccos and arcsin are antiderivatives of 1/√(1-u^2), but they differ by a constant due to their phase difference of π/2 radians. It is important to use radian measures in calculus to avoid confusion. Online calculators may default to providing the arcsin version, which can lead to misunderstandings about the relationship between these functions. The integral that gives arccos(u) can be correctly represented as -arcsin(u) + C.
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Homework Statement


I'm searching for the integral that gives arcosu

Homework Equations


as we know : ∫u'/[1-u^2]^0.5 dx = arcsinu
derivative of arccosu = -u'/[1-u^2]^0.5 + C
derivative of arcsinu= u'/[1-u^2]^0.5

The Attempt at a Solution


when I type the -u'/[1-u^2]^0.5 on the online integral calculator it always gives me -arcsinu +C
Why it doesn't gives arccosu
is the arccosu=-arcsinu?!
and what is the integral that gives arcosu?
 
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Any Help said:

Homework Statement


I'm searching for the integral that gives arcosu

Homework Equations


as we know : ∫u'/[1-u^2]^0.5 dx = arcsinu
derivative of arccosu = -u'/[1-u^2]^0.5 + C
derivative of arcsinu= u'/[1-u^2]^0.5

The Attempt at a Solution


when I type the -u'/[1-u^2]^0.5 on the online integral calculator it always gives me -arcsinu +C
Why it doesn't gives arccosu
is the arccosu=-arcsinu?!
and what is the integral that gives arcosu?
cos-1u= -sin-1u+90°.
Sine and cosine functions have a phase difference of 90°.
 
cnh1995 said:
cos-1u= -sin-1u+90°.
Sine and cosine functions have a phase difference of 90°.

No, they differ by ##\pi/2## radians. It is a great mistake to mix trigonometric integrals with degree measurements; the calculus of trig functions is in radian units only!
 
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@Any Help, please post questions about calculus in the Calculus & Beyond section, not the Precalc section. I have moved your thread.
 
Ray Vickson said:
No, they differ by π/2π/2\pi/2 radians. It is a great mistake to mix trigonometric integrals with degree measurements; the calculus of trig functions is in radian units only!
then what's the integral that gives arccos u?
 
Any Help said:
then what's the integral that gives arccos u?

There are two antiderivatives of ##1/\sqrt{1-x^2}##; they are ##\arcsin(x)+C## and ##-\arccos(x)+C##. Typically, sources like tables of integrals, or computer algebra packages, give only ONE of the two, and those seem to always be the ##\arcsin(x)## version. When you do it manually you are certainly allowed to give ##-\arccos(x) + C## as an answer; it is absolutely correct, because it is the same as ##\arcsin(x) + K## for some constant ##K## that is different from the constant ##C##.
 
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Question: A clock's minute hand has length 4 and its hour hand has length 3. What is the distance between the tips at the moment when it is increasing most rapidly?(Putnam Exam Question) Answer: Making assumption that both the hands moves at constant angular velocities, the answer is ## \sqrt{7} .## But don't you think this assumption is somewhat doubtful and wrong?

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