Question
$\int\text{e}^{\text{x}}(1-\cot\text{x}+\cot^2\text{x})\text{dx}=$
  1. $\text{e}^{\text{x}}\cot\text{x}+\text{C}$
  2. $-\text{e}^{\text{x}}\cot\text{x}+\text{C}$
  3. $\text{e}^{\text{x}}\text{cosec x}+\text{C}$
  4. $-\text{e}^{\text{x}}\text{cosec x}+\text{C}$

Answer

  1. $-\text{e}^{\text{x}}\cot\text{x}+\text{C}$

Solution:

$\text{I}=\int\text{e}^{\text{x}}(1-\cot\text{x}+\cot^2\text{x})\text{dx}$

$\text{I}=\int\text{e}^\text{x}(1+\cot^2\text{x}-\cot\text{x})\text{dx}$

$\text{I}=\int\text{e}^{\text{x}}(\text{cosec}^2\text{x}-\cot\text{x})\text{dx}$

Here, $\text{f(x)}=-\cot\text{x}$

$\text{f}'(\text{x})=\text{cosec}^2\text{x}$

$\text{I}=-\text{e}^{\text{x}}\cot\text{x}+\text{C}$

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

The order and the degree of the differential equation ${\left( {\frac{{{d^2}s}}{{d{t^2}}}} \right)^2} + 3{\left( {\frac{{ds}}{{dt}}} \right)^3} + 4 = 0$ are
If $u=x^2+y^2$ and $x=s+3 t, y=2 s-t$, then $\frac{d^2 u}{d s^2}$ is equal to
Consider a quadratic equation $ax^2 + bx + c = 0,$ where $2a + 3b + 6c = 0$ and let $g(x) = a\frac{{{x^3}}}{3} + b\frac{{{x^2}}}{2} + cx.$

Statement $1:$ The quadratic equation has at least one root in the interval $(0, 1).$

Statement $2:$ The Rolle's theorem is applicable to function $g(x)$ on the interval $[0, 1 ].$

The function $\text{f(x)}=\begin{cases}\frac{\sin3\text{x}}{\text{x}},&\text{x}\ne0\\\frac{\text{k}}{2},&\text{x}=0\end{cases}$ is continuous at x = 0, then k =
  1. 3
  2. 6
  3. 9
  4. 12
The derivative of $\sin ^{-1}\left(2 x \sqrt{1-x^2}\right)$ w.r.t. $\sin ^{-1} x$ $\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}$ < x <1,is
Let $A$ and $B$ be any two $n \times n$ matrices such that the following conditions hold: $A B=B A$ and there exist positive integers $k$ and $l$ such that $A^k=I$ ( the identity matrix) and $B^l=0$ (the zero matrix). Then,
If $a\,.\,b = b\,.\,c = c\,.\,a = 0$ , then what is the value of the scalar triple product $ [a b c] $ ?
The equation of the line passing through the points $\text{a}_1\hat{\text{i}}+\text{a}_2\hat{\text{j}}+\text{a}_3\hat{\text{k}}$ and $\text{b}\hat{\text{i}}+\text{b}_2\hat{\text{j}}+\text{b}_3\hat{\text{k}}$ is:
  1. $\vec{\text{r}}=\big(\text{a}_1\hat{\text{i}}+\text{a}_2\hat{\text{j}}+\text{a}_3\hat{\text{k}}\big)+\lambda\big(\text{b}_1\hat{\text{i}}+\text{b}_2\hat{\text{j}}+\text{b}_3\hat{\text{k}}\big)$
  2. $\vec{\text{r}}=\big(\text{a}_1\hat{\text{i}}+\text{a}_2\hat{\text{j}}+\text{a}_3\hat{\text{k}}\big)-\text{t}\big(\text{b}_1\hat{\text{i}}+\text{b}_2\hat{\text{j}}+\text{b}_3\hat{\text{k}}\big)$
  3. $\vec{\text{r}}=\text{a}_1(1-\text{t})\hat{\text{i}}+\text{a}_2(1-\text{t})\hat{\text{j}}+\text{a}_3(1-\text{t})\hat{\text{k}}+\text{t}\big(\text{b}_1\hat{\text{i}}+\text{b}_2\hat{\text{j}}+\text{b}_3\hat{\text{k}}\big)$
  4. $\text{None of these}$
The area of the region bounded by y = | x – 1 | and y = 1 is:
  1. $2$
  2. $1$
  3. $\frac{1}{2}$
  4. $\frac{1}{4}$
Consider an expanding sphere of instantaneous radius $R$ whose total mass remains constant. The expansion is such that the instantaneous density $\rho$ remains uniform throughout the volume. The rate of fractional change in density $\left(\frac{1}{\rho} \frac{\mathrm{d} \rho}{\mathrm{dt}}\right)$ is constant. The velocity $v$ of any point on the surface of the expanding sphere is proportional to