Math, asked by kamlesh599455, 1 year ago

cosx into integrate​

Answers

Answered by aadityasinha2004
5

According to the theorem, the integral of cos(x) will be equal to the function that has cos(x) as its derivative plus a constant. ... By the fundamental theorem of calculus and the fact that the derivative of sin(x) is cos(x), we have that the integral of cos(x) is sin(x) + C, where C is a constant.

Answered by manissaha129
0

Answer:

 \int \cos(x) dx =  \sin(x)  + C \\

  • sin(x)+C is the right answer.
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