Question
Evaluate the following integrals:
$\int\frac{\sqrt{\tan\text{x}}}{\sin\text{x}\cos\text{x}}\text{dx}$

Answer

$\int\frac{\sqrt{\tan\text{x}}}{\sin\text{x}\cos\text{x}}\text{dx}$
$=\int\frac{\sqrt{\tan\text{x}}}{\frac{\sin\text{x}}{\cos\text{x}}\times\cos^2\text{x}}\text{dx}$
$=\int\frac{\sqrt{\tan\text{x}}}{\tan\text{x}}\times\sec^2\text{x dx}$
$=\int\frac{1}{\sqrt{\tan\text{x}}}\times\sec^2\text{x dx}$
$=\int(\tan\text{x})^{-\frac{1}{2}}\sec^2\text{x dx}$
$\text{Let }\tan\text{x}=t$
$\Rightarrow\sec^2\text{x}=\frac{\text{dt}}{\text{dx}}$
$\Rightarrow\sec^2\text{x dx}=\text{dt}$
$\text{Now,}\int(\tan\text{x})^{-\frac{1}{2}}\sec^2\text{x dx}$
$=\int\text{t}^{{-\frac{1}{2}}}\text{dt}$
$=\Bigg[\frac{-{\frac{1}{2}+1}}{-\frac{1}{2}+1}\Bigg]+\text{C}$
$=2\sqrt{\text{t}}+\text{C}$
$=2\sqrt{\tan\text{x}}+\text{C}$

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

If w is a complex cube root of unity, show that.
$\begin{pmatrix}\begin{bmatrix}1&w&w^2\\w&w^2&1\\w^2&1&w\end{bmatrix} +\begin{bmatrix}w&w^2&1\\w^2&1&w\\w&w^2&1\end{bmatrix}\end{pmatrix}\begin{bmatrix}1\\w\\w^2\end{bmatrix}=\begin{bmatrix}0\\0\\0\end{bmatrix}$
Evaluate the following integrals:
$\int\limits_{0}^{\frac{\pi}{4}}\big(\text{a}^2\cos^2\text{x}+\text{b}^2\sin^2\text{x}\big)\text{dx}$
Find the angle between the lines whose direction cosines are given by the equations
l + 2m + 3n = 0 and 3lm - 4ln + mn = 0
Differentiate the function given in Exercise:
$\text{x}^{\text{x}\cos\text{x}}+\frac{\text{x}^2+1}{\text{x}^2-1}$
If the points with position vectors $10\hat{\text{i}}+3\hat{\text{j}},\ 12\hat{\text{i}}-5\hat{\text{j}}$ and $\text{a}\hat{\text{i}}+11\hat{\text{j}}$ are collinear, find the value of a.
Evaluate the following intregals:
$\int\frac{1}{(\sin\text{x}-2\cos\text{x})(2\sin\text{x}-\cos\text{x})}\ \text{dx}$
Find the equation of the containing the line $\frac{\text{x}+1}{-3}=\frac{\text{y}-3}{2}=\frac{\text{z}+2}{1}$ and the point (0, 7, -7) and show that the line $\frac{\text{x}}{1}=\frac{\text{y}-7}{-3}=\frac{\text{z}+7}{2}$ also lies in the same plane.
Find the area bounded by the lines y = 4x + 5, y 5 - x and 4y = x + 5.
If $(\text{x}-\text{y})\text{e}^{\frac{\text{x}}{\text{x}-\text{y}}}=\text{a},$ prove that $\text{y}\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}+\text{x}=2\text{y}$
If y = A sin x + B cos x, then prove that $\frac{d^{2} y}{d x^{2}}$ + y = 0