Question
Evaluate the following integrals:
$\int\limits^{\frac{\pi}{4}}_{0}\frac{\sin^2\text{x}\cos^2\text{x}}{(\sin^3\text{x}\cos^3\text{x})}\text{ dx}$

Answer

Let $\text{I}=\int^\limits{\frac{\pi}{4}}_{0}\frac{\sin^2\text{x}\cos^2\text{x}}{(\sin^3\text{x}\cos^3\text{x})}\text{ dx}$
$=\int^\limits{\frac{\pi}{4}}_{0}\frac{\sin^2\text{x}\cos^2\text{x}}{\cos^6\text{x}(\tan^3\text{x}+1)^2}\text{ dx}=\int^\limits{\frac{\pi}{4}}_{0}\frac{\tan^2\text{x}\sec^2\text{x}}{(\tan^3\text{x}+1)}\text{ dx}$
Put $\tan^3\text{x}+1=\text{z}$
$\therefore\ 3\tan^{2}\text{x}\sec^2\text{x dx}=\text{dt}$
$\Rightarrow\tan^{2}\text{x}\sec^2\text{x dx}=\frac{\text{dz}}{3}$
When $\text{x}\rightarrow0,\text{z}\rightarrow1$
When $\text{x}\rightarrow\frac{\pi}{4},\text{z}\rightarrow2$
$\therefore\ \text{I}=\frac{1}{3}\int^\limits{2}_1\frac{\text{dz}}{\text{z}^2}$
$=\frac{1}{3}\times-\Big[\frac{1}{\text{z}}\Big]^2_1$
$=-\frac{1}{3}\Big(\frac{1}{2}-1\Big)$
$=-\frac{1}{3}\times\Big(-\frac{1}{2}\Big)$
$=\frac{1}{6}$

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

Is $|\sin\text{x}|$ differentible? What about $\cos|\text{x}|?$
For the following differntial equations verify that the accompanying function is a solution:
Differential equation Function
$\text{y}=\Big(\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}\Big)^2$ $\text{y}=\frac{1}{4}(\text{x}\pm\text{a})^2$
If $\text{y}=\sin^{-1}\big(6\text{x}\sqrt{1-9\text{x}^2}\big), -\frac{1}{3\sqrt{2}}<\text{x}<\frac{1}{3\sqrt{2}},$ then find $\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}.$
Find $\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}$ when x and y are connected by the relation:
$\sin(\text{xy})+\frac{\text{x}}{\text{y}}=\text{x}^2-\text{y}$
Solve the differential equation $(1 + x^2) \frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}} + \text{y} = \text{e}^{\tan^{-1}\text{x}.}$
Show that the relation R on the set Z of integers, given by R = {(a, b): 2 divides a - b},  is an equivalence relation.
If A and B are two events such that,
$\text{P(A)}=\frac{6}{11},\text{P(B)}=\frac{5}{11}$ and $\text{P}(\text{A}\cap\text{B})=\frac{7}{11},$ then find $\text{P}(\text{A}\cap\text{B}),$ P(A|B) and P(B|A).
If $\text{A}=\begin{bmatrix}3 & -3 & 4 \\ 2 & -3 & 4 \\ 0 & -1 & 1 \end{bmatrix},$ show that $A^{-1} = A^3.$
Evaluate the following integrals:
$\int_{0}^\limits{\frac{\pi}{4}}\big(\text{a}^2\cos^2\text{x}+\text{b}^2\sin^2\text{x}\big)\text{dx}$
Find the coordinates of the foot of the perpendicular and the perpendicular distance of the point P(3, 2, 1) from the plane 2x – y + z + 1 = 0. Find also, the image of the point in the plane.