Help with Calculus...

lol, I'm sure I would love one too, if we were allowed to even use one
x2...not allowed to use calculators in any of my math courses in college. Calc 3 was a real kick in the *** when I depended on my calculator for calc 1 and 2 in high school, then all of the sudden I wasn't allowed to use it anymore.

 
The Voyage 200 is not acceptable for many tests...especially standardized tests.

I get to start Calc 3 my freshman year...sounds fun. At least I won't even touch anything new until a few weeks or months into the course. //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/smile.gif.1ebc41e1811405b213edfc4622c41e27.gif

 
can someone help me with this problem...where did the 1/2 come from?

untitled2.bmp


 
Since du = 1/x, and you have 1/2x in the problem, you pull out the 1/2 so that the problem is 1/x... to match the du.
not exactly understanding...i dont think 1/2 was in the problem...you get it somehow...where do you get the 1/2?

 
look at the problem. It is (ln4x*1/2x)dx. Now when you find du, it equals 1/xdx. DU MUST EQUAL SOMETHING IN THE PROBLEM. So... since you have (1/2x)dx in the problem, you can pull out 1/2 so that it equals (1/x)dx, then you can continue the problem.

 
whenever you do u-substitution, you want to get rid of all x's and dx. You have to figure out what can "u" equal so that when the substitutions are made, all you end up with is u's & du.

In this problem,

Code:
u=ln 4x

du =       4
       ------ dx
         4x

du = x^-1 dx

dx =         du
       ------------
            x^-1
dx = x du 


pulling the 1/2 outside the integral and replacing ln 4x, with "u" and dx with "xdu" gives:
      _
1   |       u * xdu
---  |    --------------
2   |         x
    ¯ 

the x's cancel so that you're left with the integral of u du,
which is
               u²
            ------
               2

multiplying that times the 1/2 gives you
1
--- u²
4

putting ln 4x back in for u gives you the final answer, 

1
--- (ln 4x)²
4
 
and if you're confused where the 1/2 came from...it's part of the problem. you have ln 4x divided by 2x. you divide by two is same as multiply by 1/2. and you know that a constant (a normal number) can be pulled to the left side of the integral, hence 1/2 times the integral of ln 4x divided by x.

 
Activity
No one is currently typing a reply...

About this thread

electronicsgeek

10+ year member
CarAudio.com Elite
Thread starter
electronicsgeek
Joined
Location
US
Start date
Participants
Who Replied
Replies
71
Views
1,915
Last reply date
Last reply from
electronicsgeek
1781975538525.png

Doxquzme

    Jun 20, 2026
  • 0
  • 0
1781975510897.png

Doxquzme

    Jun 20, 2026
  • 0
  • 0

New threads

Top