Asked by Katie
Integrate using integration by parts
(integral) (5-x) e^3x
u = 5-x
du = -dx
dv = e^3x
v = 3e^3x
I wonder if this is right so far.
= uv - (integral) v du
= (5-x)(3e^3x) - (integral) (-3e^3x)
=(5-x)(3e^3x) + (integral) (3e^3x)
= (5-x)(3e^3x) + 9e^3x + C
(integral) (5-x) e^3x
u = 5-x
du = -dx
dv = e^3x
v = 3e^3x
I wonder if this is right so far.
= uv - (integral) v du
= (5-x)(3e^3x) - (integral) (-3e^3x)
=(5-x)(3e^3x) + (integral) (3e^3x)
= (5-x)(3e^3x) + 9e^3x + C
Answers
Answered by
Damon
dv = e^3x
v = (1/3)e^3x !!!!!!
v = (1/3)e^3x !!!!!!
Answered by
Katie
Okay then, is this the final answer
= (5-x)(3e^3x) + (integral) -- (1/3)e^3x
= (5-x)(3e^3x) + (1/9)e^3x + C
= (5-x)(3e^3x) + (integral) -- (1/3)e^3x
= (5-x)(3e^3x) + (1/9)e^3x + C
Answered by
drwls
No. You are using the wrong v function in the u*v term. See Damon's answer.
The (Integral)-v*du term is:
-(Integral)(1/3)e^3x(-dx)
= (1/9)e^3x
So your answer is ok for that term
The (Integral)-v*du term is:
-(Integral)(1/3)e^3x(-dx)
= (1/9)e^3x
So your answer is ok for that term
Answered by
Katie
ok, thank you very much. Happy New Year
Answered by
jaime
x^2
Answered by
jaime
x^2
There are no AI answers yet. The ability to request AI answers is coming soon!
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.