Will Hunting
Member
Use the substitution t = u^2 - 2 to find the following indefinite integral:
S [1/sqrt(t + 2)]dt
From the relationship above,
dt/du = 2u
dt = 2udu, which is substituted for dt
Also, u^2 = t + 2,
1/sqrt(t + 2) = 1/sqrt(u^2) = 1/u
Now, integral can be written,
S [1/u x 2udu] = S 2du = 2u = 2sqrt(t + 2) (Since u = sqrt(t + 2))
Is this all cool? I'm worried that it seemed I was integrating a statement in u with respect to "t", but I'm pretty sure the equalities I used make it valid.
S [1/sqrt(t + 2)]dt
From the relationship above,
dt/du = 2u
dt = 2udu, which is substituted for dt
Also, u^2 = t + 2,
1/sqrt(t + 2) = 1/sqrt(u^2) = 1/u
Now, integral can be written,
S [1/u x 2udu] = S 2du = 2u = 2sqrt(t + 2) (Since u = sqrt(t + 2))
Is this all cool? I'm worried that it seemed I was integrating a statement in u with respect to "t", but I'm pretty sure the equalities I used make it valid.
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