Integrating Rational Expressions

Jason76

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The quotient rule is used for the getting the derivatives of rational expressions, but with integration something different is done.

\(\displaystyle \int \dfrac{-2x}{e^{x} - 2} dx\)

Would we go this way?

\(\displaystyle \int \dfrac{-2x }{e^{x}(2) } - \dfrac{-2x}{2(e^{x})} dx\) - Logic being that the problem can be broken into two fraction each with a different denominator. But because of different denominators, there has to be an attempt to make the denominators alike.

\(\displaystyle \int \dfrac{-4x}{2e^{x}} - \dfrac{-2xe^{x}}{2e^{x}} dx\)

Right so far?




This book says to do something different.
 
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The quotient rule is used for the getting the derivatives of rational expressions, but with integration something different is done.

\(\displaystyle \int \dfrac{-2x}{e^{x} - 2} dx\)

Would we go this way?

\(\displaystyle \int \dfrac{-2x }{e^{x}(2) } - \dfrac{-2x}{2(e^{x})} dx\) - Logic being that the problem can be broken into two fraction each with a different denominator. But because of different denominators, there has to be an attempt to make the denominators alike.

\(\displaystyle \int \dfrac{-4x}{2e^{x}} - \dfrac{-2xe^{x}}{2e^{x}} dx\)

Right so far? NO!

This book says to do something different.
Are your two fractions equal to the original integrand??
"Making denominators alike" would have to be (e^x - 2), and you can't get there fromn what you have.

Have you perhaps gone to a new chapter? When "this book says something different," might that include "integration by parts"?
 
The quotient rule is used for the getting the derivatives of rational expressions, but with integration something different is done.

\(\displaystyle \int \dfrac{-2x}{e^{x} - 2} dx\)

Would we go this way?

No ..

To do the above problem - one of the ways would be to substitute:

u = ex - 2 → x = ln(u+2) → dx = du/(u+2)

so your integrand becomes

\(\displaystyle 2\int \dfrac{ln(u+2)}{u}\, \dfrac{du}{u+2}\)

and continue....


\(\displaystyle \int \dfrac{-2x }{e^{x}(2) } - \dfrac{-2x}{2(e^{x})} dx\) - Logic being that the problem can be broken into two fraction each with a different denominator. But because of different denominators, there has to be an attempt to make the denominators alike.

\(\displaystyle \int \dfrac{-4x}{2e^{x}} - \dfrac{-2xe^{x}}{2e^{x}} dx\)

Right so far?




This book says to do something different.
,
 
Are your two fractions equal to the original integrand??
"Making denominators alike" would have to be (e^x - 2), and you can't get there fromn what you have.

Have you perhaps gone to a new chapter? When "this book says something different," might that include "integration by parts"?

I can't understand the strategy used by Khan (poster on the thread) yet. Also, how can u do integration by parts on a quotient?
 
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I can't understand the strategy used by Khan (poster on the thread) yet. Also, how can u do integration by parts on a quotient?
For integration by parts, you need to choose u and dv such that the integral looks like \(\displaystyle \int{u\ dv}\), hopefully with dv being something you can integrate and u being something you can differentiate. Since I know how to integrate \(\displaystyle dv = 2x\ dx\), that would leave \(\displaystyle u = -1/(e^x-2)\). That does not look particularly hopeful, because the derivative of u has a higher power in the denominator. Unless this is from a chapter on integration by parts, I fear that I may be leading you toward a wrong path.

I would then try the substitution Kahn suggested.
Let \(\displaystyle u = e^x - 2\)............\(\displaystyle du = e^x dx\)
.....\(\displaystyle x = \ln{(u + 2)}\).......\(\displaystyle dx = du/(u + 2)\)

Can you tell us what you did not understand about that substitution?

Please show us your work on either of these approaches! When you ask open-ended questions, it seems we are trying to teach the lesson instead of coaching you.
 
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