Question
Evaluate the following integrals:
$\int\limits^\pi_0\frac{\text{x}}{1+\sin\alpha\sin\text{x}}\text{ dx}$

Answer

We have,
$\text{I}=\int\limits^\pi_0\frac{\text{x}}{1+\sin\alpha\sin\text{x}}\text{ dx}\ ...(\text{i})$
$=\int\limits^\pi_0\frac{\pi-\text{x}}{1+\cos\alpha\sin(\pi-\text{x})}\text{ dx}$
$=\int\limits^\pi_0\frac{\pi-\text{x}}{1+\cos\alpha\sin\text{x}}\text{ dx}\ ....(\text{ii})$
Adding (i) and (ii) we get
$2\text{I}=\int\limits^\pi_0\frac{\text{x}+\pi-\text{x}}{1+\cos\alpha\sin\text{x}}\text{ dx}$
$\Rightarrow\text{I}=\frac{\pi}{2}\int\limits^\pi_0\frac{1}{1+\cos\alpha\sin\text{x}}\text{ dx}$
$=\frac{\pi}{2}\int\limits^\pi_0\frac{1}{1+\cos\alpha\sin\text{x}}$
$=\frac{\pi}{2}\int\limits^\pi_0\frac{1}{1+\cos\alpha\frac{2\tan\frac{\text{x}}{2}}{1+\tan^{2}\frac{\text{x}}{2}}}\text{ dx}$
$=\frac{\pi}{2}\int\limits^\pi_0\frac{1+\tan^{2}\frac{\text{x}}{2}}{1+\tan^{2}\frac{\text{x}}{2}+2\cos\alpha\tan^{2}\frac{\text{x}}{2}}\text{ dx}$
$=\frac{\pi}{2}\int\limits^\pi_0\frac{\sec^{2}\frac{\text{x}}{2}}{1+\tan^{2}\frac{\text{x}}{2}+2\cos\alpha\tan^{2}\frac{\text{x}}{2}}\text{ dx}$
Putting $\tan\frac{\text{x}}{2}=\text{t}$
$\Rightarrow\frac{1}{2}\sec^2\text{x dx}=\text{dt}$
When $\text{x}\rightarrow0;\text{ t}\rightarrow0$
and $\text{x}\rightarrow\pi;\text{ t}\rightarrow\infty$
$\therefore\ \text{I}=\frac{\pi}{2}\int\limits^{\infty}_0\frac{2}{1+\text{t}^2+2\cos\alpha+1}\text{ dt}$
$=\frac{\pi}{2}\int\limits^{\infty}_0\frac{2}{(\text{t}+\cos\alpha)-\cos^2\alpha+1}\text{ dt}$
$={\pi}\int\limits^{\infty}_0\frac{1}{(\text{t}+\cos\alpha)+\sin^2\alpha}\text{ dt}$
$=\pi\Big[\frac{1}{\sin\alpha}\tan^{-1}\Big(\frac{1+\cos\alpha}{\sin\alpha}\Big)\Big]^1_0$
$=\frac{\pi}{\sin\alpha}\Big[\tan^{-1}(\infty)-\tan^{-1}(\cot\alpha)\Big]$
$=\frac{\pi}{\sin\alpha}\Big[\frac{\pi}{2}-\tan^{-1}\Big(\tan\Big(\frac{\pi}{2}-\alpha\Big)\Big)\Big]$
$=\frac{\pi\alpha}{\sin\alpha}$

Need a full question paper?

Generate a complete, print-ready paper with questions like this in minutes — across 16+ boards, with answer keys.

Start Generating Free

Similar questions

If $\text{y}=\text{x}\sin(\text{a}+\text{y}),$ prove that $\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}=\frac{\sin^2(\text{a}+\text{y})}{\sin(\text{a}+\text{y})-\text{y}\cos(\text{a}+\text{y})}$
Evaluate the following intregals:
$\int\frac{2\text{x}-3}{(\text{x}^2-1)(2\text{x}-3)}\ \text{dx}$
Show that the function $\text{f} : \text{R}\rightarrow\text{R}$ defined by $\text{f(x})=\frac{\text{x}}{\text{x}^2+1},\forall\text{ x}\in\text{R}$  is neither one-one nor onto. Also, if $\text{g} : \text{R}\rightarrow\text{R}$ is defined as g(x) = 2x – 1, find fog(x).
Find the intervals in which the following functions are increasing or decreasing. $f(x) = 2x^2 - 24x + 7$
If$ y = P e^{ax}+ Q e^{bx},$ show that
$\frac{\text{d}^2\text{y}}{\text{dx}^2}-(\text{a}+\text{b})\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}+\text{aby}=0$
Solve the following system of equations by matrix method:
$6x - 12y + 25z = 4$
$4x + 15y - 20z = 3$
$2x + 18y + 15z = 10$
Find the angle of intersecting of the following curves:
$\text{y}=\text{x}^2\text{ and }\text{x}^2+\text{y}^2=20$
Show that $\text{y}=\text{e}^\text{x}(\text{A}\cos\text{x}+\text{B}\sin\text{x})$ is a solution of the differential equation $\frac{\text{d}^2\text{y}}{\text{dx}^2}-2\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}+2\text{y}=0$
If $\text{x}=\text{a}\cos\theta,\text{y}=\text{b}\sin\theta$ Show that $\frac{\text{d}^2\text{y}}{\text{dx}^2}=-\frac{\text{b}^4}{\text{a}^2\text{y}^3}$ 
If $\text{xy}\log(\text{x}+\text{y})=1,$ prove that $\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}=\frac{\text{y}(\text{x}^2\text{y}+\text{x}+\text{y})}{\text{x}(\text{xy}^2+\text{x}+\text{y})}$