Can someone help me find the integral of (x^p)ln(x)dx? thanks!
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calculus help....
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Re: calculus help....
You have to do integration by parts.
You'll have to take the integral of one of those inner functions, and the derivative of the other.
Since ln(x) is easier to differentiate than to integrate and x^p is not that hard to do either way, I'd go with differentiating ln(x).
The answer will be [ln(x)*(1/x)*x^(p+1)] minus the integral of (1/x)*x^(p+1)*ln(x)
Then, that integral should be easy to evaluate by substitution of variables because you have ln(x) and its derivative, 1/x in the same function.
Let U = ln(x), then x^(p+1) is equal to (E^u)^(p+1)
If you need more help, let me know.
By the way, this is assuming p is a constant.
If you are in vector calculus and p is a variable, sorry but I can't help you yet [img]/images/graemlins/laugh.gif[/img]
EDIT--
oops, I goofed and wrote some ps where I needed x
guess what, x^(p+1) times 1/x is equal to x^p, no?
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Re: calculus help....
[ QUOTE ]
You have to do integration by parts.
You'll have to take the integral of one of those inner functions, and the derivative of the other.
Since ln(x) is easier to differentiate than to integrate and x^p is not that hard to do either way, I'd go with differentiating ln(x).
The answer will be [ln(x)*(1/p)*x^(p+1)] minus the integral of (1/p)*x^(p+1)*ln(x)
Then, that integral should be easy to evaluate by substitution of variables because you have ln(x) and its derivative, 1/x in the same function.
Let U = ln(x), then x^(p+1) is equal to (E^u)^(p+1)
If you need more help, let me know.
By the way, this is assuming p is a constant.
If you are in vector calculus and p is a variable, sorry but I can't help you yet [img]/images/graemlins/laugh.gif[/img]
[/ QUOTE ]
Yea I was supposed to do it with integration by parts, but I got a really fookin ugly answer...
ln(x)[x^(p+1))/(p+1)] - [x^(p+1)/(p+1)^2]
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