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Need some help with this one.
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I might be misinterpreting this, so your saying
, then does that mean to get G'(x) you need to find the derivative of the stated inverse?Offline
All I have done is noted that
by the domain-splitting property of the Riemann integral. But since I've defined F(y) as
I can write your original integral as
.Differentiating and using the chain rule, we get (can't write apostrophes in LaTeX):
G'(x) = -sin(x)F'(cos(x)) - cos(x)F'(sin(x))
But what are F'(sin(x)) and F'(cos(x))?
Last edited by zetafunc (2014-06-02 21:19:15)
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Sorry about the delay; I think I've got it
?Is the notation used okay?
Last edited by Shelled (2014-06-04 14:33:44)
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Alright, thank you
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