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The integral of 1 / Sqrt(1+x^3)

2007-01-19 11:41:18 · 3 answers · asked by Scythian1950 7 in Science & Mathematics Mathematics

3 answers

Hmm. If it had x^2 instead of x^3, the answer would just be arcsin(x). I tried using the integrator program on the first link below, typing in "1/Sqrt[1 - x^3]", and got something rather long that introduced eliptic integrals.

I don't know where paheli got her answer, but differentiating it doesn't give back the original expression.

2007-01-19 12:20:26 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Theres a program out there called maple, buy it and it will not only answer this question, but it will show you how to do it. Maple costs about 50$, it's canadian, it rocks, now the facts, get the vacs against calculus. Seriously, BUY MAPLE 10.0 or higher

2007-01-19 19:49:32 · answer #2 · answered by Jamie 3 · 0 1

the answer= - 3x^2 / 2(sqrt(1+x^3))

I hope this helps!!

2007-01-19 19:50:21 · answer #3 · answered by smart-crazy 4 · 1 3

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