Integration by substitution for antiderivatives
Integration by substitution is an integration techn
vilitatelp014
Answered question
2022-05-08
Integration by substitution for antiderivatives Integration by substitution is an integration technique for definite integrals based upon this formula:
I don't understand how it can be applied in the case of indefinite integrals, how it can be used to find antiderivatives, as in this example:
The formula is for definite integrals. Why can it be applied to indefinite integrals?
Answer & Explanation
rotgelb7kjxw
Beginner2022-05-09Added 16 answers
Step 1 Let F(u) be an antiderivative of f(u). We show that is an antiderivative of . The proof uses the Chain Rule. Differentiate . We get , which is . In your particular example, we want , where . We can rewrite this as . Let . Then . So we want . Step 2 This is where . We get . One does not go through all of this writing when actually using substitution. Here is a medium length version of the same thing. Let . Then and . Thus our integral is , which is . Now replace u by x/a.
Govindennz34j
Beginner2022-05-10Added 6 answers
Explanation: If you know that then Fundamental Theorem of Calculus tells you that this can also be used for antiderivatives. Indeed, an antiderivative of is .