Details, Explanation and Meaning About Trigonometric substitution

Trigonometric substitution Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

In mathematics, trigonometric substitution is the substitution of trigonometric functions for other expressions. One may use the trigonometric identities

to simplify certain integrals containing the radical expressions

respectively.

In the expression a2x2, the substitution of a sin(θ) for x makes it possible to use the identity 1 − sin2θ = cos2θ.

In the expression a2 + x2, the substitution of a tan(θ) for x makes it possible to use the identity tan2θ + 1 = sec2θ.

Similarly, in x2a2, the substitution of sec(θ) for x makes it possible to use the identity sec2 − 1 = tan2.

Examples

In the integral

one may use

so that the integral becomes

(provided a > 0; if a < 0 then √a2 would be |a|, which would differ from a).

For a definite integral, one must figure out how the bounds of integration change. For example, as x goes from 0 to a/2, then sin(θ) goes from 0 to 1/2, so θ goes from 0 to π/6. Then we have


In the integral

one may write

so that the integral becomes

(provided a > 0).

Substitutions that eliminate trigonometric functions

Substitution can be used to remove trigonometric functions. For instance,

,

,
(but be careful with the signs)

,

Example (see quintic of l'Hospital
[1]):

This is an Article on Trigonometric substitution. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Trigonometric substitution


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