0% found this document useful (0 votes)
361 views

Advanced Integrals Exercises Solutions

This paper shows solutions to more complicated integrals in mathematics. This involves solutions where we use GAMMA and BETA. I hope this can help people.

Uploaded by

Mikkel
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
361 views

Advanced Integrals Exercises Solutions

This paper shows solutions to more complicated integrals in mathematics. This involves solutions where we use GAMMA and BETA. I hope this can help people.

Uploaded by

Mikkel
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 3

Solutions for few advanced integrals

Exercise 1.1. Consider the integral ∫ ∞


M 3 · x 5 · 2−x dx
0

Solution: We rewrite 2−x  e −x ln(2) such that


∫ ∞
3 · x 5 · e −x ln(2) dx
0

Let u  x ln(2) then x  ln(2)


u
. Now find the derivative du  (x ln(2))0  ln(2)dx or dx  ln(2) du
then the integral
is ∫ ∞  5 ∫ ∞ ∫ ∞
u −u 1 3 · e −u · u 5 3
3· ·e · du  6
du  6
· e −u · u 5 du
0 ln(2) ln(2) 0 ln(2) ln(2) 0
Note that the last integral is the gamma distribution, so
∫ ∞
e −u · u 5 du  Γ(6)  5!
0

Therefore ∫ ∞
3 3 3 360
M · e −u · u 5 du  · 5!  · 120 
ln(2)6 0 ln(2)6 ln(2) 6 ln(2)6

Exercise 1.2. Consider the integral ∫


e tan(x) dx

Solution: Let t  tan(x) then x  arctan(t) the derivative of x is


1
dx  (arctan(t))0  dt
t2 +1
So the integral can be rewritten to ∫
1
et dt
t2 +1
1 1
Note that t 2 +1
is the same as (t+i)(t−i)
so

1
et dt
(t + i)(t − i)
We will convert this to the partial fraction form such that

ie t ie t et et
∫   ∫   ∫  
i i i
e t
− dt  − dt  − dt
2(t + i) 2(t − i) 2(t + i) 2(t − i) 2 t+i t−i
ew

Note: w dw  Ei(w).
et et
∫ ∫
i i
dt − dt
2 t+i 2 t−i
Let u 1  t + i ⇐⇒ t  u 1 − i then du1  dt and u2  t − i ⇐⇒ t  u 2 + i then du2  dt such that

e u1 −i e u2 +i ie −i e u1 ie i e u2 e ie −i ie i
∫ ∫ ∫ ∫
i i
du 1 − du 2  du1 − du 2  Ei(u 1 ) − Ei(u 2 )
2 u1 2 u2 2 u1 2 u2 2 2
We substitute t back
ie −i ie i
Ei(t + i) − Ei(t − i)
2 2
We substitute x back and we add a constant C
ie −i ie i
Ei(tan(x) + i) − Ei(tan(x) − i) + C
2 2

1
Exercise 1.3. Consider the integral ∫ ∞
6
E e −x dx
−∞
√6
Solution: We rewrite the integral. Let x  t then dx  1
6t 5/6
dt thus
∫ ∞ ∫ ∞ ∫ ∞
−t 1 1 −t − 56 1 1
2 e · 5/6 dt  e ·t dt  e −t · t 6 −1 dt
0 6t 3 0 3 0

This is also known as the gamma integral.


∫ ∞  
1 −t 1 1 1
e ·t 6 −1 dt  Γ
3 0 3 6

Therefore, ∫ ∞  
−x 6 1 1
E  e dx  Γ ≈ 1.855438667
−∞ 3 6

Exercise 1.4. Consider the integral


∫ 1√
1 − x 5 dx
0
1
Solution: Let t  then x  t . Computing the derivative we get dx 
x5 5 1
5t 4/5
dt and we do a substitution. Note
we don’t need to change bounds. (Think about it).
∫ 1√ ∫ 1√ ∫ 1 √
∫ 1
1 1 − 45 1 1 3
1− x 5 dx  1 − t 4/5 dt  t 1 − tdt  t 5 −1 (1 − t) 2 −1 dt
0 0 5t 5 0 5 0

This is also known as the Beta function, so we have


∫ 1  
1 1 3 1 1 3
t 5 −1 (1 − t) 2 −1 dt  B , ≈ 0.89552
5 0 5 5 2

Exercise 1.5. Consider the integral ∫ ∞


3
3e −x dx
0
√3
Solution: We rewrite the integral. Let x  t then dx  1
3t 2/3
dt thus
∫ ∞ ∫ ∞ ∫ ∞
−t 1 −t − 23 1
3 e · 2/3 dt  e ·t dt  e −t · t 3 −1 dt
0 3t 0 0

This is also known as the gamma integral, so the answer is:


∫ ∞  
−t 1 1
e ·t 3 −1 dt  Γ ≈ 2.678938537
0 3

Exercise 1.6. Consider the integral


ln(x) + 2

dx
ln(x ln(x) + x)
Solution: We do a substitution. Let t  x ln(x) + x then dt  ln(x) + 2dx ⇐⇒ dx  1
ln(x)+2
dt. This implies

ln(x) + 2 ln(x) + 2
∫ ∫ ∫
1 1
dx  dt  dt
ln(x ln(x) + x) ln(t) ln(x) + 2 ln(t)
∫x
We use the fact that 1
2 ln(s)
ds Li(x) + k hence

1
dt  Li(t) + k
ln(t)

2
We substitute back and obtain
ln(x) + 2

dx  Li(x ln(x) + x) + k
ln(x ln(x) + x)

If we compute this in Maple, we will obtain an answer with Ei(x) and ln(x), i.e.

Ei(ln(x ln(x) + x)) + k

but it is still the same.

You might also like