Nice. I see what you did there.so the answer should be e^4.6 which is 99.95 (2dp)
No it is e to the power of x times e to the power of x^2
I don't think either of these functions have a primitive that can be expressed with elementary functions?Integrate tan^2(x)*e^x
Similar to BOS 2012 Paper questionI remember doing this question in a trial paper . I'll post a solution tomorrow if nobody has solved it yet. Hint: Use a trig-substitution
Your smart.
Not sure if i made a mistake there lol, and yeah i know i skipped a lot towards the end.
As for the second part I manipulated the first equation to make it look like the expression in the question and took the summation but i'm not sure what to do there.
(2^(2n+1))/(2n+1)(2nCn)= what you had proven.
Not sure if i made a mistake there lol, and yeah i know i skipped a lot towards the end.
As for the second part I manipulated the first equation to make it look like the expression in the question and took the summation but i'm not sure what to do there.
(2^(2n+1))/(2n+1)(2nCn)= what you had proven.
Doesnt that work?
?here is one from a friend of mine that tests all your MX2 Integration skills
integrate with respect to x
2 ln (1+x/1+x^2)
sure, it still tests all your skills even if it doesn't cover everything. I'd didn't say it was going to be hard.?
Just split the log and then parts for each term.
From observation (I haven't actually done it yet), the only MX2 technique required is IBP, which is hardly 'all your skills' considering there are perhaps 5-6 other integration techniques in Extension 2.sure, it still tests all your skills even if it doesn't cover everything. I'd didn't say it was going to be hard.
(you have to be able to integrate by parts effectively twice, and trigonometry)
I don't think yiu can take it outside of sigma since the expression is in terms of nyeah there should also be a (2n+1)/2^(2n+1) outside and expand the sigma