Integrate $frac{cos(2x)}{sin(x)}$ [on hold]












0














Integrate $$intfrac{cos(2x)}{sin(x)}dx$$
I've tried all the trigonometric identities (known to me) but it just keeps getting more and more complicated.



I was also unable to solve another integral of similar form:



$$intfrac{cos(3x)}{1-sin(x)}dx$$ Solving the double chain is very confusing...










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put on hold as off-topic by amWhy, RRL, Cesareo, Zacky, Leucippus yesterday


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    0














    Integrate $$intfrac{cos(2x)}{sin(x)}dx$$
    I've tried all the trigonometric identities (known to me) but it just keeps getting more and more complicated.



    I was also unable to solve another integral of similar form:



    $$intfrac{cos(3x)}{1-sin(x)}dx$$ Solving the double chain is very confusing...










    share|cite|improve this question













    put on hold as off-topic by amWhy, RRL, Cesareo, Zacky, Leucippus yesterday


    This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


    • "This question is missing context or other details: Please provide additional context, which ideally explains why the question is relevant to you and our community. Some forms of context include: background and motivation, relevant definitions, source, possible strategies, your current progress, why the question is interesting or important, etc." – amWhy, RRL, Cesareo, Zacky, Leucippus

    If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
















      0












      0








      0







      Integrate $$intfrac{cos(2x)}{sin(x)}dx$$
      I've tried all the trigonometric identities (known to me) but it just keeps getting more and more complicated.



      I was also unable to solve another integral of similar form:



      $$intfrac{cos(3x)}{1-sin(x)}dx$$ Solving the double chain is very confusing...










      share|cite|improve this question













      Integrate $$intfrac{cos(2x)}{sin(x)}dx$$
      I've tried all the trigonometric identities (known to me) but it just keeps getting more and more complicated.



      I was also unable to solve another integral of similar form:



      $$intfrac{cos(3x)}{1-sin(x)}dx$$ Solving the double chain is very confusing...







      calculus integration substitution






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      asked yesterday









      Conny Dago

      255




      255




      put on hold as off-topic by amWhy, RRL, Cesareo, Zacky, Leucippus yesterday


      This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


      • "This question is missing context or other details: Please provide additional context, which ideally explains why the question is relevant to you and our community. Some forms of context include: background and motivation, relevant definitions, source, possible strategies, your current progress, why the question is interesting or important, etc." – amWhy, RRL, Cesareo, Zacky, Leucippus

      If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.




      put on hold as off-topic by amWhy, RRL, Cesareo, Zacky, Leucippus yesterday


      This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


      • "This question is missing context or other details: Please provide additional context, which ideally explains why the question is relevant to you and our community. Some forms of context include: background and motivation, relevant definitions, source, possible strategies, your current progress, why the question is interesting or important, etc." – amWhy, RRL, Cesareo, Zacky, Leucippus

      If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.






















          4 Answers
          4






          active

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          2














          For the first one we can write $cos(2x) =1-2sin^2 x$.
          $$Rightarrow int frac{cos(2x)}{sin x}dx= int frac{1}{sin x}dx-2int sin xdx$$





          For the second one we have:
          $$I=int frac{cos(3x)}{1-sin x}frac{1+sin x}{1+sin x}dx=int frac{cos(3x)}{cos^2 x}dx+intfrac{cos(3x)sin x}{cos^2 x}dx$$
          Now we can use the following identity: $$cos(3x)=4cos^3 x-3cos x$$
          $$Rightarrow I=4intcos x dx-3intfrac{1}{cos x}dx+2int sin(2x) dx -3int tan x dx$$



          I think you can finish now, but as a hint for $displaystyle{int frac{dx}{sin x}}$ and $displaystyle{int frac{dx}{cos x}}$, write them as: $displaystyle{int frac{sin x}{1-cos^2 x}dx}$ respectively $displaystyle{int frac{cos x}{1-sin^2 x}dx}$.






          share|cite|improve this answer































            1














            $$frac{cos2x}{sin x}=frac{1-2sin^2x}{sin x}==frac1{sin x}-2sin x$$



            You may also want to observe that



            $$intfrac1{sin x}dx=intfrac{1+t^2}{2t}cdotfrac2{1+t^2}dt=intfrac{dt}tldots$$



            with the Weierstrass substitution $;t=tanfrac x2;$ ...which can also be used for the second integral.






            share|cite|improve this answer





























              0














              Hint:



              Bioche's rules suggest for the first integral to make the substitution
              $$t=cos x,quadmathrm dt=-sin x ,mathrm dx,$$
              and for the second integral:
              $$t=sin x,quadmathrm dt=cos x ,mathrm dx.$$
              For the latter, you'll also need to know the formula
              $$cos3x=4cos^3x-3cos x.$$
              You'll obtain ultimately the integral of a rational function in $t$, which you integrate with the standard method of partial fractions decomposition.






              share|cite|improve this answer































                0














                Hint:



                For the second one, $$dfrac{cos x(4cos^2x-3)}{1-sin x},$$ set $1-sin x=u,implies cos^2x=1-(1-u)^2=?$



                For the first, $$dfrac{2cos^2x-1}{1-cos^2x}sin x,$$ choose $cos x=v$



                $$dfrac{2v^2-1}{v^2-1}=2+dfrac{v+1-(v-1)}{2(v^2-1)}$$






                share|cite|improve this answer




























                  4 Answers
                  4






                  active

                  oldest

                  votes








                  4 Answers
                  4






                  active

                  oldest

                  votes









                  active

                  oldest

                  votes






                  active

                  oldest

                  votes









                  2














                  For the first one we can write $cos(2x) =1-2sin^2 x$.
                  $$Rightarrow int frac{cos(2x)}{sin x}dx= int frac{1}{sin x}dx-2int sin xdx$$





                  For the second one we have:
                  $$I=int frac{cos(3x)}{1-sin x}frac{1+sin x}{1+sin x}dx=int frac{cos(3x)}{cos^2 x}dx+intfrac{cos(3x)sin x}{cos^2 x}dx$$
                  Now we can use the following identity: $$cos(3x)=4cos^3 x-3cos x$$
                  $$Rightarrow I=4intcos x dx-3intfrac{1}{cos x}dx+2int sin(2x) dx -3int tan x dx$$



                  I think you can finish now, but as a hint for $displaystyle{int frac{dx}{sin x}}$ and $displaystyle{int frac{dx}{cos x}}$, write them as: $displaystyle{int frac{sin x}{1-cos^2 x}dx}$ respectively $displaystyle{int frac{cos x}{1-sin^2 x}dx}$.






                  share|cite|improve this answer




























                    2














                    For the first one we can write $cos(2x) =1-2sin^2 x$.
                    $$Rightarrow int frac{cos(2x)}{sin x}dx= int frac{1}{sin x}dx-2int sin xdx$$





                    For the second one we have:
                    $$I=int frac{cos(3x)}{1-sin x}frac{1+sin x}{1+sin x}dx=int frac{cos(3x)}{cos^2 x}dx+intfrac{cos(3x)sin x}{cos^2 x}dx$$
                    Now we can use the following identity: $$cos(3x)=4cos^3 x-3cos x$$
                    $$Rightarrow I=4intcos x dx-3intfrac{1}{cos x}dx+2int sin(2x) dx -3int tan x dx$$



                    I think you can finish now, but as a hint for $displaystyle{int frac{dx}{sin x}}$ and $displaystyle{int frac{dx}{cos x}}$, write them as: $displaystyle{int frac{sin x}{1-cos^2 x}dx}$ respectively $displaystyle{int frac{cos x}{1-sin^2 x}dx}$.






                    share|cite|improve this answer


























                      2












                      2








                      2






                      For the first one we can write $cos(2x) =1-2sin^2 x$.
                      $$Rightarrow int frac{cos(2x)}{sin x}dx= int frac{1}{sin x}dx-2int sin xdx$$





                      For the second one we have:
                      $$I=int frac{cos(3x)}{1-sin x}frac{1+sin x}{1+sin x}dx=int frac{cos(3x)}{cos^2 x}dx+intfrac{cos(3x)sin x}{cos^2 x}dx$$
                      Now we can use the following identity: $$cos(3x)=4cos^3 x-3cos x$$
                      $$Rightarrow I=4intcos x dx-3intfrac{1}{cos x}dx+2int sin(2x) dx -3int tan x dx$$



                      I think you can finish now, but as a hint for $displaystyle{int frac{dx}{sin x}}$ and $displaystyle{int frac{dx}{cos x}}$, write them as: $displaystyle{int frac{sin x}{1-cos^2 x}dx}$ respectively $displaystyle{int frac{cos x}{1-sin^2 x}dx}$.






                      share|cite|improve this answer














                      For the first one we can write $cos(2x) =1-2sin^2 x$.
                      $$Rightarrow int frac{cos(2x)}{sin x}dx= int frac{1}{sin x}dx-2int sin xdx$$





                      For the second one we have:
                      $$I=int frac{cos(3x)}{1-sin x}frac{1+sin x}{1+sin x}dx=int frac{cos(3x)}{cos^2 x}dx+intfrac{cos(3x)sin x}{cos^2 x}dx$$
                      Now we can use the following identity: $$cos(3x)=4cos^3 x-3cos x$$
                      $$Rightarrow I=4intcos x dx-3intfrac{1}{cos x}dx+2int sin(2x) dx -3int tan x dx$$



                      I think you can finish now, but as a hint for $displaystyle{int frac{dx}{sin x}}$ and $displaystyle{int frac{dx}{cos x}}$, write them as: $displaystyle{int frac{sin x}{1-cos^2 x}dx}$ respectively $displaystyle{int frac{cos x}{1-sin^2 x}dx}$.







                      share|cite|improve this answer














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                      edited yesterday

























                      answered yesterday









                      Zacky

                      5,1761752




                      5,1761752























                          1














                          $$frac{cos2x}{sin x}=frac{1-2sin^2x}{sin x}==frac1{sin x}-2sin x$$



                          You may also want to observe that



                          $$intfrac1{sin x}dx=intfrac{1+t^2}{2t}cdotfrac2{1+t^2}dt=intfrac{dt}tldots$$



                          with the Weierstrass substitution $;t=tanfrac x2;$ ...which can also be used for the second integral.






                          share|cite|improve this answer


























                            1














                            $$frac{cos2x}{sin x}=frac{1-2sin^2x}{sin x}==frac1{sin x}-2sin x$$



                            You may also want to observe that



                            $$intfrac1{sin x}dx=intfrac{1+t^2}{2t}cdotfrac2{1+t^2}dt=intfrac{dt}tldots$$



                            with the Weierstrass substitution $;t=tanfrac x2;$ ...which can also be used for the second integral.






                            share|cite|improve this answer
























                              1












                              1








                              1






                              $$frac{cos2x}{sin x}=frac{1-2sin^2x}{sin x}==frac1{sin x}-2sin x$$



                              You may also want to observe that



                              $$intfrac1{sin x}dx=intfrac{1+t^2}{2t}cdotfrac2{1+t^2}dt=intfrac{dt}tldots$$



                              with the Weierstrass substitution $;t=tanfrac x2;$ ...which can also be used for the second integral.






                              share|cite|improve this answer












                              $$frac{cos2x}{sin x}=frac{1-2sin^2x}{sin x}==frac1{sin x}-2sin x$$



                              You may also want to observe that



                              $$intfrac1{sin x}dx=intfrac{1+t^2}{2t}cdotfrac2{1+t^2}dt=intfrac{dt}tldots$$



                              with the Weierstrass substitution $;t=tanfrac x2;$ ...which can also be used for the second integral.







                              share|cite|improve this answer












                              share|cite|improve this answer



                              share|cite|improve this answer










                              answered yesterday









                              DonAntonio

                              177k1492225




                              177k1492225























                                  0














                                  Hint:



                                  Bioche's rules suggest for the first integral to make the substitution
                                  $$t=cos x,quadmathrm dt=-sin x ,mathrm dx,$$
                                  and for the second integral:
                                  $$t=sin x,quadmathrm dt=cos x ,mathrm dx.$$
                                  For the latter, you'll also need to know the formula
                                  $$cos3x=4cos^3x-3cos x.$$
                                  You'll obtain ultimately the integral of a rational function in $t$, which you integrate with the standard method of partial fractions decomposition.






                                  share|cite|improve this answer




























                                    0














                                    Hint:



                                    Bioche's rules suggest for the first integral to make the substitution
                                    $$t=cos x,quadmathrm dt=-sin x ,mathrm dx,$$
                                    and for the second integral:
                                    $$t=sin x,quadmathrm dt=cos x ,mathrm dx.$$
                                    For the latter, you'll also need to know the formula
                                    $$cos3x=4cos^3x-3cos x.$$
                                    You'll obtain ultimately the integral of a rational function in $t$, which you integrate with the standard method of partial fractions decomposition.






                                    share|cite|improve this answer


























                                      0












                                      0








                                      0






                                      Hint:



                                      Bioche's rules suggest for the first integral to make the substitution
                                      $$t=cos x,quadmathrm dt=-sin x ,mathrm dx,$$
                                      and for the second integral:
                                      $$t=sin x,quadmathrm dt=cos x ,mathrm dx.$$
                                      For the latter, you'll also need to know the formula
                                      $$cos3x=4cos^3x-3cos x.$$
                                      You'll obtain ultimately the integral of a rational function in $t$, which you integrate with the standard method of partial fractions decomposition.






                                      share|cite|improve this answer














                                      Hint:



                                      Bioche's rules suggest for the first integral to make the substitution
                                      $$t=cos x,quadmathrm dt=-sin x ,mathrm dx,$$
                                      and for the second integral:
                                      $$t=sin x,quadmathrm dt=cos x ,mathrm dx.$$
                                      For the latter, you'll also need to know the formula
                                      $$cos3x=4cos^3x-3cos x.$$
                                      You'll obtain ultimately the integral of a rational function in $t$, which you integrate with the standard method of partial fractions decomposition.







                                      share|cite|improve this answer














                                      share|cite|improve this answer



                                      share|cite|improve this answer








                                      edited yesterday

























                                      answered yesterday









                                      Bernard

                                      118k639112




                                      118k639112























                                          0














                                          Hint:



                                          For the second one, $$dfrac{cos x(4cos^2x-3)}{1-sin x},$$ set $1-sin x=u,implies cos^2x=1-(1-u)^2=?$



                                          For the first, $$dfrac{2cos^2x-1}{1-cos^2x}sin x,$$ choose $cos x=v$



                                          $$dfrac{2v^2-1}{v^2-1}=2+dfrac{v+1-(v-1)}{2(v^2-1)}$$






                                          share|cite|improve this answer


























                                            0














                                            Hint:



                                            For the second one, $$dfrac{cos x(4cos^2x-3)}{1-sin x},$$ set $1-sin x=u,implies cos^2x=1-(1-u)^2=?$



                                            For the first, $$dfrac{2cos^2x-1}{1-cos^2x}sin x,$$ choose $cos x=v$



                                            $$dfrac{2v^2-1}{v^2-1}=2+dfrac{v+1-(v-1)}{2(v^2-1)}$$






                                            share|cite|improve this answer
























                                              0












                                              0








                                              0






                                              Hint:



                                              For the second one, $$dfrac{cos x(4cos^2x-3)}{1-sin x},$$ set $1-sin x=u,implies cos^2x=1-(1-u)^2=?$



                                              For the first, $$dfrac{2cos^2x-1}{1-cos^2x}sin x,$$ choose $cos x=v$



                                              $$dfrac{2v^2-1}{v^2-1}=2+dfrac{v+1-(v-1)}{2(v^2-1)}$$






                                              share|cite|improve this answer












                                              Hint:



                                              For the second one, $$dfrac{cos x(4cos^2x-3)}{1-sin x},$$ set $1-sin x=u,implies cos^2x=1-(1-u)^2=?$



                                              For the first, $$dfrac{2cos^2x-1}{1-cos^2x}sin x,$$ choose $cos x=v$



                                              $$dfrac{2v^2-1}{v^2-1}=2+dfrac{v+1-(v-1)}{2(v^2-1)}$$







                                              share|cite|improve this answer












                                              share|cite|improve this answer



                                              share|cite|improve this answer










                                              answered yesterday









                                              lab bhattacharjee

                                              223k15156274




                                              223k15156274















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