Integral help

johnny101

New member
Joined
Nov 8, 2013
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34
Hello,
I need some help with the integral below. We have been studying integral tables and the professor gave us a slightly different problem on the homework set, and I can't figure it out. It mirrors the example of dx/ x (sqrt) 10x-1 we had earlier in the homework(which I can solve), but it has a different setup so I'm lost.

The problem is:

dx / x (sqrt 5+4x).

Can anyone offer some helps/steps and break this down logically?


 
It mirrors the example of dx/ x (sqrt) 10x-1....
I'm familiar with "dy/dx", but not with just "dx" (or "dx/x"?). Also, what is the meaning of "(sqrt)"? I'm familiar with "sqrt(m)" (being "the square root of m"), but not with a free-floating square root like you're using. You say that you are able to do this "integral" (which has no integration symbol or other "integral" indicator in it); perhaps it would help if you showed what this means, as doing so might clear up your meaning in the rest of your post.

The problem is:

dx / x (sqrt 5+4x).
What you have posted above could mean the following:

. . . . .\(\displaystyle \dfrac{dx}{x}\left(\sqrt{5}\, +\, 4x\right)\)

However, I must confess that I have no idea how this might represent an "integral". Kindly please reply with clarification. Thank you! ;)
 
Hello,
I need some help with the integral below. We have been studying integral tables and the professor gave us a slightly different problem on the homework set, and I can't figure it out. It mirrors the example of dx/ x (sqrt) 10x-1 we had earlier in the homework(which I can solve), but it has a different setup so I'm lost.

The problem is:

dx / x (sqrt 5+4x).

Can anyone offer some helps/steps and break this down logically?


Is your problem:

\(\displaystyle \displaystyle{\int \dfrac{dx}{x(\sqrt{5 + 4x})}}\)

Please share your work with us ...

If you are stuck at the beginning tell us and we'll start with the definitions.

You need to read the rules of this forum. Please read the post titled "Read before Posting" at the following URL:

http://www.freemathhelp.com/forum/th...Before-Posting
 
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