Question
Evalute the following integrals:
$\int\frac{-\sin\text{x}+2\cos\text{x}}{2\sin\text{x}+\cos\text{x}}\text{dx}$

Answer

Let $\text{I}=\int\frac{-\sin\text{x}+2\cos\text{x}}{2\sin\text{x}+\cos\text{x}}\text{dx}\ .....\text{(i)}$
Let $2\sin\text{x}+\cos\text{x}=\text{t}$ then,
$\text{d}(2\sin\text{x}+\cos\text{x})=\text{dt}$
$\Rightarrow(2\cos\text{x}-\sin\text{x})\text{dx}=\text{dt}$
$\Rightarrow\text{dx}=\frac{\text{dt}}{-\sin\text{x}+2\cos\text{x}}$
Putting $2\sin\text{x}+\cos\text{x}=\text{t and dx}=\frac{\text{dt}}{-\sin\text{x}+2\cos\text{x}}$ in equation (i), we get,
$\text{I}=\int\frac{-\sin\text{x}+2\cos\text{x}}{\text{t}}\times\frac{\text{dt}}{-\sin\text{x}+2\cos\text{x}}$
$=\int\frac{\text{dt}}{\text{t}}$
$=\log|\text{t}|+\text{C}$
$=\log|2\sin\text{x}+\cos\text{x}|+\text{C}$
$\therefore\text{I}=\log|2\sin\text{x}+\cos\text{x}|+\text{C}$

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

Let $A = R - {3}, B = R - {1}.$ Let $f : A \rightarrow B$ be defined by $\text{f}(\text{x})=\frac{\text{x}-2}{\text{x}-3}\ \forall\ \text{x}\in\text{A}.$ Then show that f is bijective.
Find the equation of the line passing through the points $(1, -1, 1)$ and perpendicular to the lines joining the points $(4, 3, 2), (1, -1, 0)$ and $(1, 2, -1) (2, 1, 1).$
Let $\vec a = \hat i + 4\hat j + 2\hat k$, $\vec b = 3\hat i - 2\hat j + 7\hat k$ and $\vec c = 2\hat i - \hat j + 4\hat k$. Find a vector $\vec d$ which is perpendicular to both $\vec a$ and $\vec b$, and $\vec c.\vec d = 15$.
If $\text{A}=\begin{bmatrix}\cos\alpha+\sin\alpha&\sqrt{2}\sin\alpha\\-\sqrt{2}\sin\alpha&\cos\alpha-\sin\alpha\end{bmatrix},$ prove that
$ \text{A}^2=\begin{bmatrix}\cos\text{n}\alpha+\sin\text{n}\alpha&\sqrt{2}\sin\text{n}\alpha\\-\sqrt{2}\sin\text{n}\alpha&\cos\text{n}\alpha-\sin\text{n}\alpha\end{bmatrix}$ for all $\text{n}\in\text{N}.$
Find the intervals in which $\text{f}(\text{x})=\log(1+\text{x})-\frac{\text{x}}{1+\text{x}}$ is increasing or decreasing.
If $\text{y}=\frac{1}{2}\log\Big(\frac{1-\cos2\text{x}}{1+\cos2\text{x}}\Big),$ Prvoe that $\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}=2\text{ cosec }2\text{x}$
Evaluate the following intregals:
$\int\frac{2}{2+\sin^22\text{x}}\text{ dx}$
Determine whether the following pair of lines intersect or not:
$\frac{\text{x}-1}{3}=\frac{\text{y}-1}{-1}=\frac{\text{z}+1}{0}$ and $\frac{\text{x}-4}{2}=\frac{\text{y}-0}{0}=\frac{\text{z}+1}{3}$
If $\text{x}=\text{a}(\cos\text{t}+\text{t}\sin\text{t})\ \text{and}\ \text{y}=\text{a}(\sin\text{t}-\text{t}\cos\text{t}),$ find the value of $\frac{\text{d}^2\text{y}}{\text{dx}^2}\ \text{at}\ \text{t}=\frac{\pi}{4}.$
Show that the lines:
$\overrightarrow{\text{r}} = \hat{\text{i}} + \hat{\text{j}} + \hat{\text{k}} + \lambda(\hat{\text{i}} - \hat{\text{j}} + \hat{\text{k}})$
$\overrightarrow{\text{r}} = \hat{\text{i}} + \hat{\text{j}} + \hat{\text{k}} + \mu(2\hat{\text{i}} - \hat{\text{j}} + 3\hat{\text{k}})$ are coplanar. Also, find the equation of the plane containing these lines.