òcosec(x) dx


By Anonymous on Friday, February 9, 2001 - 09:57 pm :

How can you integrate the following:
òcosec(x) dx??
Thanks


By James Lingard (Jchl2) on Friday, February 9, 2001 - 10:35 pm :
Multiply the integrand by (cosec(x) + cot(x))/ (cosec(x) + cot(x)). Then the numerator is the derivative of the denominator, so you get:

òcosec(x) dx = -ln(cosec(x) + cot(x)) + c

James.

(Method supplied by two of my physicist and chemical engineer friends who are considerably better than me at this sort of thing!)


By Anonymous on Friday, February 9, 2001 - 10:58 pm :

Very neat James. Thank you.
Its like when you have to integrate:
òsec(x) dx, and you have to multiply top and bottom by (sec(x)+tan(x)).
Why does this method work, I mean, unless you've been shown it before, how would you have come to the conclusion of multiplying top and bottom by it?

Thanks.

PS: also thanks to your friends! ;)


By James Lingard (Jchl2) on Friday, February 9, 2001 - 11:06 pm :

Don't ask me - I don't think I'd ever have come up with it!

James.