Math, asked by sp1967811, 5 months ago

7. integration of x sin^x​

Answers

Answered by Abhishek2610
0

Answer:

We can note that continuously differentiating sin(x) results in a loop of cos(x), –sin(x), –cos(x), sin(x)..., whereas differentiating x once gives 1.

Step-by-step explanation:

From this, it seems to make sense that we would want to differentiate the x part (so u is x) and therefore integrate the sin(x) part (so dv/dx is sin(x) ). So, let

u = x, which implies du/dx = 1

and let

dv/dx = sin(x). Integrating this to get v gives v = –cos(x).

So our integral is now of the form required for integration by parts.

∫ x sin(x) dx

= ∫ u(dv/dx) dx

= uv – ∫ v(du/dx) dx

= –x cos(x) – ∫ –cos(x)*1 dx

= –x cos(x) – ∫ –cos(x) dx

= –x cos(x) + ∫ cos(x) dx

The integral of cos(x) is equal to sin(x). We can check this by differentiating sin(x), which does indeed give cos(x). Finally, as with all integration without limits, there must be a constant added, which I'll call c. So the final answer is

∫ x sin(x) dx = –x cos(x) + sin(x) + c

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Answered by ankitghansela1
0

Answer:

Step-by-step explanation:

Integration of Sin x = (-cos x) + C

Integration of x² = x³/3 + c

Where C is constant.

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