Question
Evaluate: $\int\text{e}^{x}\Bigg(\frac{\sin 4x - 4}{1-\cos 4x}\Bigg)\text{dx}$.

Answer

$\text{I}=\int\text{e}^{x}\Bigg(\frac{\sin 4x - 4}{1-\cos 4x}\Bigg)\text{dx}$
$=\int\text{e}^{x}\Bigg[\frac{\sin 4x}{1-\cos 4x}-\frac{4}{1 - \cos 4x}\Bigg]\text{dx}$
$=\int\text{e}^{x}\Bigg[\frac{2\sin 2x \cos 2x}{2\cdot\sin^{2} 2x}-\frac{4}{2\sin^{2}2x}\Bigg]\text{dx}$
$=\int\text{e}^{x}[\cot2x-2\text{cosec}^{2}2x]\text{dx}$
This is of the form $=\int\text{e}^{x}[\text{f(x)+f'(x)}]\text{dx}$
$\therefore \text{I}=\text{e}^{x}\cot\text{2x + c}.$

Need a full question paper?

Generate a complete, print-ready paper with questions like this in minutes — across 16+ boards, with answer keys.

Start Generating Free

Similar questions

Solve the following differential equations:$\text{y}(1+\text{e}^{\text{x}})\text{dy}=(\text{y}+1)\text{e}^{\text{x}}\text{ dx}$
$\text{Let A = Q} \times \text{Q}$ and let $*$ be a binary operation on A defined by$\text{(a, b)} $*$ \text{(c, d) = (ac, b + ad)} \text{ for (a, b), (c, d)} \in \text{A}.$ Determine, whether $*$ is commutative and associative. Then, with respect to $*$ on A.
  1. Find the identity element in A.
  2. Find the invertible elements of A.
Evaluate the following determinant:
$\begin{vmatrix}1&3&9&27\\3&9&27&1\\9&27&1&3\\27&1&3&9 \end{vmatrix}$
Find $\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}},$ when
$\text{x}=\text{a}(\theta+\sin\theta)$ and $\text{y}=\text{a}(1-\cos\theta)$
Evaluate the following integrals as limit of sum:
$\int\limits^2_{0}\big(\text{x}^2+4\big)\text{dx}$
If $\text{P}=\begin{bmatrix}\text{x}&0&0\\0&\text{y}&0\\0&0&\text{z}\end{bmatrix}$ and $\text{Q}=\begin{bmatrix}\text{a}&0&0\\0&\text{b}&0\\0&0&\text{c}\end{bmatrix},$ prove that $\text{PQ}=\begin{bmatrix}\text{xa}&0&0\\0&\text{y}\text{b}&0\\0&0&\text{zc}\end{bmatrix}=\text{QP}$
Given the probability that A can solve a problem is $\frac{2}{3}$ and the probability that B can solve the same problem is $\frac{3}{5}$. Find the probability that none of the two will be able to solve the problem.
Using properties of determinants, prove that:
$\begin{vmatrix} \text{(b + c)}^{2} & \text{a}^{2} & \text{bc} \\ \text{(c + a)}^{2} & \text{b}^{2} & \text{ca} \\ \text{(a + b)}^{2} & \text{c}^{2} & \text{ab} \end{vmatrix} = {(a - b) (b - c) (c - a) (a + b + c)}\text{(a}^{2} + \text{b}^{2} + \text{c}^{2}) $
$\int\frac{\text{x}-1}{\sqrt{\text{x}+4}}\ \text{dx}$
Solve the following differential equations:
$\text{x}\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}+\cot\text{y}=0,$ given that $\text{y}=\frac{\pi}{4},$ when $\text{x}=\sqrt{2}.$