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Integration by Substitution
Lesson 5.5
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Substitution with Indefinite Integration
This is the “backwards” version of the chain rule Recall … Then …
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Substitution with Indefinite Integration
In general we look at the f(x) and “split” it into a g(u) and a du/dx So that …
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Substitution with Indefinite Integration
Note the parts of the integral from our example
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Where is the 4 which we need?
Example Try this … what is the g(u)? what is the du/dx? We have a problem … Where is the 4 which we need?
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Where did the 1/3 come from?
Example We can use one of the properties of integrals We will insert a factor of 4 inside and a factor of ¼ outside to balance the result Where did the 1/3 come from? Why is this now a 3?
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Can You Tell? Which one needs substitution for integration?
Go ahead and do the integration.
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Try Another …
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Assignment A Lesson 5.5 Page 340 Problems: 1 – 33 EOO 49 – 77 EOO
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Change of Variables We completely rewrite the integral in terms of u and du Example: So u = 2x and du = 2 dx But we have an x in the integrand So we solve for x in terms of u
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Change of Variables We end up with
It remains to distribute the and proceed with the integration Do not forget to "un-substitute"
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What About Definite Integrals
Consider a variation of integral from previous slide One option is to change the limits u = 3t Then when t = 1, u = when t = 2, u = 5 Resulting integral
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What About Definite Integrals
Also possible to "un-substitute" and use the original limits
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Integration of Even & Odd Functions
Recall that for an even function The function is symmetric about the y-axis Thus An odd function has The function is symmetric about the orgin
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Assignment B Lesson 5.5 Page 341 Problems: EOO 117 – 132 EOO
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