Question #a06e9

1 Answer
Mar 25, 2017

intsec(x+a)dx=ln(abs(sec(x+a)+tan(x+a)))+C

Explanation:

You may know the straightaway rule:

intsec(t)dt=ln(abs(sec(t)+tan(t)))+C

In case you don't, we can derive this rule and solve your problem simultaneously.

intsec(x+a)dx

This is a difficult move to foresee, which is why it's likely a good move to memorize the secant integral. But, we can do the integration by multiplying the numerator and denominator by sec(x+a)+tan(x+a):

=intsec(x+a)(sec(x+a)+tan(x+a))/(sec(x+a)+tan(x+a))dx

=int(sec^2(x+a)+sec(x+a)tan(x+a))/(sec(x+a)+tan(x+a))dx

Now, let u=sec(x+a)+tan(x+a). Its derivative is: du=(sec(x+a)tan(x+a)+sec^2(x+a))dx.

Note that u is the denominator and du is the numerator:

=int(du)/u

Which is the natural logarithm integral:

=ln(absu)+C

So:

=ln(abs(sec(x+a)+tan(x+a)))+C

Which follows the rule intsec(t)dt=ln(abs(sec(t)+tan(t)))+C if you, from the outset, let t=x+a implying that dt=dx.