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PROFESSOR: Now,
to start out today

9
00:00:25,240 --> 00:00:27,850
we're going to finish up
what we did last time.

10
00:00:27,850 --> 00:00:30,950
Which has to do with
partial fractions.

11
00:00:30,950 --> 00:00:33,160
I told you how to
do partial fractions

12
00:00:33,160 --> 00:00:35,080
in several special
cases and everybody

13
00:00:35,080 --> 00:00:37,920
was trying to figure out
what the general picture was.

14
00:00:37,920 --> 00:00:39,180
But I'd like to lay that out.

15
00:00:39,180 --> 00:00:41,730
I'll still only do
it for an example.

16
00:00:41,730 --> 00:00:43,810
But it will be somehow
a bigger example

17
00:00:43,810 --> 00:00:53,310
so that you can see what
the general pattern is.

18
00:00:53,310 --> 00:01:04,280
Partial fractions, remember,
is a method for breaking up

19
00:01:04,280 --> 00:01:06,730
so-called rational functions.

20
00:01:06,730 --> 00:01:09,510
Which are ratios of polynomials.

21
00:01:09,510 --> 00:01:13,110
And it shows you that you
can always integrate them.

22
00:01:13,110 --> 00:01:14,920
That's really the theme here.

23
00:01:14,920 --> 00:01:21,190
And this is what's reassuring
is that it always works.

24
00:01:21,190 --> 00:01:23,670
That's really the bottom line.

25
00:01:23,670 --> 00:01:26,550
And that's good
because there are

26
00:01:26,550 --> 00:01:34,100
a lot of integrals that don't
have formulas and these do.

27
00:01:34,100 --> 00:01:35,560
It always works.

28
00:01:35,560 --> 00:01:43,340
But, maybe with lots of help.

29
00:01:43,340 --> 00:01:46,257
So maybe slowly.

30
00:01:46,257 --> 00:01:47,840
Now, there's a little
bit of bad news,

31
00:01:47,840 --> 00:01:50,820
and I have to be totally
honest and tell you

32
00:01:50,820 --> 00:01:52,230
what all the bad news is.

33
00:01:52,230 --> 00:01:54,930
Along with the good news.

34
00:01:54,930 --> 00:02:00,070
The first step, which maybe
I should be calling Step 0,

35
00:02:00,070 --> 00:02:08,710
I had a Step 1, 2 and 3
last time, is long division.

36
00:02:08,710 --> 00:02:11,790
That's the step where you
take your polynomial divided

37
00:02:11,790 --> 00:02:17,440
by your other polynomial,
and you find the quotient

38
00:02:17,440 --> 00:02:22,470
plus some remainder.

39
00:02:22,470 --> 00:02:24,370
And you do that
by long division.

40
00:02:24,370 --> 00:02:27,520
And the quotient is easy
to take the antiderivative

41
00:02:27,520 --> 00:02:30,010
of because it's
just a polynomial.

42
00:02:30,010 --> 00:02:32,380
And the key extra
property here is

43
00:02:32,380 --> 00:02:35,680
that the degree of the numerator
now over here, this remainder,

44
00:02:35,680 --> 00:02:40,510
is strictly less than the
degree of the denominator.

45
00:02:40,510 --> 00:02:44,140
So that you can
do the next step.

46
00:02:44,140 --> 00:02:48,900
Now, the next step which I
called Step 1 last time, that's

47
00:02:48,900 --> 00:02:52,290
great imagination, it's
right after Step 0, Step 1

48
00:02:52,290 --> 00:02:54,930
was to factor the denominator.

49
00:02:54,930 --> 00:03:00,630
And I'm going to illustrate by
example what the setup is here.

50
00:03:00,630 --> 00:03:09,120
I don't know maybe,
we'll do this.

51
00:03:09,120 --> 00:03:12,920
Some polynomial here,
maybe cube this one.

52
00:03:12,920 --> 00:03:21,440
So here I've factored
the denominator.

53
00:03:21,440 --> 00:03:24,840
That's what I called
Step 1 last time.

54
00:03:24,840 --> 00:03:27,650
Now, here's the first
piece of bad news.

55
00:03:27,650 --> 00:03:31,620
In reality, if somebody
gave you a multiplied

56
00:03:31,620 --> 00:03:35,530
out degree-whatever
polynomial here,

57
00:03:35,530 --> 00:03:40,710
you would be very hard
pressed to factor it.

58
00:03:40,710 --> 00:03:44,132
A lot of them are extremely
difficult to factor.

59
00:03:44,132 --> 00:03:46,590
And so that's something you
would have to give to a machine

60
00:03:46,590 --> 00:03:47,940
to do.

61
00:03:47,940 --> 00:03:50,880
And it's just basically
a hard problem.

62
00:03:50,880 --> 00:03:54,050
So obviously, we're only
going to give you ones

63
00:03:54,050 --> 00:03:55,480
that you can do by hand.

64
00:03:55,480 --> 00:03:58,060
So very low degree examples.

65
00:03:58,060 --> 00:03:59,320
And that's just the way it is.

66
00:03:59,320 --> 00:04:03,600
So this is really a hard step
in disguise, in real life.

67
00:04:03,600 --> 00:04:06,000
Anyway, we're just going
to take it as given.

68
00:04:06,000 --> 00:04:07,820
And we have this
numerator, which

69
00:04:07,820 --> 00:04:10,720
is of degree less
than the denominator.

70
00:04:10,720 --> 00:04:14,830
So let's count up what
its degree has to be.

71
00:04:14,830 --> 00:04:18,640
This is 4 + 2 + 6.

72
00:04:18,640 --> 00:04:22,440
So this is degree 4 + 2 + 6.

73
00:04:22,440 --> 00:04:24,190
I added that up because
this is degree 4,

74
00:04:24,190 --> 00:04:28,600
this is degree 2 and
(x^2)^3 is the 6th power.

75
00:04:28,600 --> 00:04:32,330
So all together it's
this, which is 12.

76
00:04:32,330 --> 00:04:39,822
And so this thing
is of degree <= 11.

77
00:04:39,822 --> 00:04:41,280
All the way up to
degree 11, that's

78
00:04:41,280 --> 00:04:44,240
the possibilities for
the numerator here.

79
00:04:44,240 --> 00:04:49,810
Now, the extra information that
I want to impart right now,

80
00:04:49,810 --> 00:04:56,450
is just this setup.

81
00:04:56,450 --> 00:04:58,990
Which I called Step 2 last time.

82
00:04:58,990 --> 00:05:05,260
And the setup is this.

83
00:05:05,260 --> 00:05:07,590
Now, it's going to take
us a while to do this.

84
00:05:07,590 --> 00:05:10,810
We have this factor here.

85
00:05:10,810 --> 00:05:12,450
We have another factor.

86
00:05:12,450 --> 00:05:14,620
We have another term,
with the square.

87
00:05:14,620 --> 00:05:18,220
We have another
term with the cube.

88
00:05:18,220 --> 00:05:22,581
We have another term
with the fourth power.

89
00:05:22,581 --> 00:05:24,330
So this is what's going
to happen whenever

90
00:05:24,330 --> 00:05:25,530
you have linear factors.

91
00:05:25,530 --> 00:05:28,560
You'll have a collection
of terms like this.

92
00:05:28,560 --> 00:05:31,030
So you have four
constants to take care of.

93
00:05:31,030 --> 00:05:34,550
Now, with a quadratic
in the denominator,

94
00:05:34,550 --> 00:05:36,840
you need a linear
function in the numerator.

95
00:05:36,840 --> 00:05:41,230
So that's, if you like,
B_0 x + C_0 divided

96
00:05:41,230 --> 00:05:49,370
by this quadratic term here.

97
00:05:49,370 --> 00:05:52,500
And what I didn't
show you last time

98
00:05:52,500 --> 00:05:59,720
was how you deal with higher
powers of quadratic terms.

99
00:05:59,720 --> 00:06:04,090
So when you have a quadratic
term, what's going to happen

100
00:06:04,090 --> 00:06:07,370
is you're going to take
that first factor here.

101
00:06:07,370 --> 00:06:11,870
Just the way you
did in this case.

102
00:06:11,870 --> 00:06:15,500
But then you're going to
have to do the same thing

103
00:06:15,500 --> 00:06:24,120
with the next power.

104
00:06:24,120 --> 00:06:27,880
Now notice, just as in
the case of this top row,

105
00:06:27,880 --> 00:06:29,830
I have just a constant here.

106
00:06:29,830 --> 00:06:33,030
And even though I increased
the degree of the denominator

107
00:06:33,030 --> 00:06:34,540
I'm not increasing
the numerator.

108
00:06:34,540 --> 00:06:35,970
It's staying just a constant.

109
00:06:35,970 --> 00:06:38,230
It's not linear up here.

110
00:06:38,230 --> 00:06:39,850
It's better than that.

111
00:06:39,850 --> 00:06:41,990
It's just a constant.

112
00:06:41,990 --> 00:06:44,130
And here it stayed a constant.

113
00:06:44,130 --> 00:06:45,630
And here it stayed a constant.

114
00:06:45,630 --> 00:06:48,070
Similarly here, even
though I'm increasing

115
00:06:48,070 --> 00:06:49,620
the degree of the
denominator, I'm

116
00:06:49,620 --> 00:06:52,810
leaving the numerator, the
form of the numerator, alone.

117
00:06:52,810 --> 00:06:55,150
It's just a linear factor
and a linear factor.

118
00:06:55,150 --> 00:07:05,350
So that's the key
to this pattern.

119
00:07:05,350 --> 00:07:09,850
I don't have quite as
jazzy a song on mine.

120
00:07:09,850 --> 00:07:13,410
So this is so long that it
runs off the blackboard here.

121
00:07:13,410 --> 00:07:15,820
So let's continue
it on the next.

122
00:07:15,820 --> 00:07:20,200
We've got this B_2
x + C_2-- sorry,

123
00:07:20,200 --> 00:07:23,150
(B_3 x + C_3) / (x^2 + 4)^3.

124
00:07:26,590 --> 00:07:38,590
I guess I have room
for it over here.

125
00:07:38,590 --> 00:07:41,120
I'm going to talk about
this in just a second.

126
00:07:41,120 --> 00:07:43,590
Alright, so here's the pattern.

127
00:07:43,590 --> 00:07:51,270
Now, let me just do a count
of the number of unknowns

128
00:07:51,270 --> 00:07:52,344
we have here.

129
00:07:52,344 --> 00:07:54,010
The number of unknowns
that we have here

130
00:07:54,010 --> 00:07:58,750
is 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6,
7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12.

131
00:07:58,750 --> 00:08:00,930
That 12 is no coincidence.

132
00:08:00,930 --> 00:08:03,815
That's the degree
of the polynomial.

133
00:08:03,815 --> 00:08:05,690
And it's the number of
unknowns that we have.

134
00:08:05,690 --> 00:08:08,060
And it's the number
of degrees of freedom

135
00:08:08,060 --> 00:08:11,215
in a polynomial of degree 11.

136
00:08:11,215 --> 00:08:13,090
If you have all these
free coefficients here,

137
00:08:13,090 --> 00:08:17,560
you have the coefficient x^0,
x^1, all the way up to x^ 11.

138
00:08:17,560 --> 00:08:23,100
And 0 through 11 is 12
different coefficients.

139
00:08:23,100 --> 00:08:26,380
And so this is a very
complicated system

140
00:08:26,380 --> 00:08:28,150
of equations for unknowns.

141
00:08:28,150 --> 00:08:33,259
This is twelve equations
for twelve unknowns.

142
00:08:33,259 --> 00:08:34,800
So I'll get rid of
this for a second.

143
00:08:34,800 --> 00:08:41,090
So we have twelve
equations, twelve unknowns.

144
00:08:41,090 --> 00:08:43,830
So that's the other bad news.

145
00:08:43,830 --> 00:08:46,020
Machines handle this very
well, but human beings

146
00:08:46,020 --> 00:08:47,630
have a little trouble with 12.

147
00:08:47,630 --> 00:08:51,570
Now, the cover-up
method works very neatly

148
00:08:51,570 --> 00:08:53,730
and picks out this term here.

149
00:08:53,730 --> 00:08:54,470
But that's it.

150
00:08:54,470 --> 00:08:56,550
So it reduces it to an 11 by 11.

151
00:08:56,550 --> 00:09:00,170
You'll be able to
evaluate this in no time.

152
00:09:00,170 --> 00:09:00,890
But that's it.

153
00:09:00,890 --> 00:09:04,240
That's the only simplification
of your previous method.

154
00:09:04,240 --> 00:09:06,250
We don't have a method for this.

155
00:09:06,250 --> 00:09:08,510
So I'm just showing what
the whole method looks

156
00:09:08,510 --> 00:09:10,343
like but really you'd
have to have a machine

157
00:09:10,343 --> 00:09:14,760
to implement this once it
gets to be any size at all.

158
00:09:14,760 --> 00:09:15,490
Yeah, question.

159
00:09:15,490 --> 00:09:18,060
STUDENT: [INAUDIBLE]

160
00:09:18,060 --> 00:09:22,510
PROFESSOR: It's
one big equation,

161
00:09:22,510 --> 00:09:24,920
but it's a polynomial equation.

162
00:09:24,920 --> 00:09:32,530
So there's an equation, there's
this function R(x) = a_11 x^11

163
00:09:32,530 --> 00:09:37,610
+ a_10 x^10...

164
00:09:37,610 --> 00:09:41,350
and these things are known.

165
00:09:41,350 --> 00:09:43,495
This is a known expression here.

166
00:09:43,495 --> 00:09:46,620
And then when you cross-multiply
on the other side,

167
00:09:46,620 --> 00:09:51,330
what you have is,
well, it's A_1 times--

168
00:09:51,330 --> 00:09:54,400
If you cancel this
denominator with that,

169
00:09:54,400 --> 00:10:05,330
you're going to get (x + (x+2)^3
(x^2+2x+3) (x^2+4)^3 plus

170
00:10:05,330 --> 00:10:08,260
the term for A_2, etc.

171
00:10:08,260 --> 00:10:10,350
It's a monster equation.

172
00:10:10,350 --> 00:10:12,620
And then to separate it out
into separate equations,

173
00:10:12,620 --> 00:10:19,225
you take the coefficient
on x^11, x^10, ...

174
00:10:19,225 --> 00:10:21,670
all the way down to x^0.

175
00:10:21,670 --> 00:10:27,280
And all told, that means there
are a total of 12 equations.

176
00:10:27,280 --> 00:10:31,030
11 through 0 is 12 equations.

177
00:10:31,030 --> 00:10:34,727
Yeah, another question.

178
00:10:34,727 --> 00:10:35,560
STUDENT: [INAUDIBLE]

179
00:10:35,560 --> 00:10:37,777
PROFESSOR: Should I
write down rest of this?

180
00:10:37,777 --> 00:10:38,610
STUDENT: [INAUDIBLE]

181
00:10:38,610 --> 00:10:40,820
PROFESSOR: Should you
write down all this stuff?

182
00:10:40,820 --> 00:10:43,950
Well, that's a good question.

183
00:10:43,950 --> 00:10:46,070
So you notice I
didn't write it down.

184
00:10:46,070 --> 00:10:47,300
Why didn't I write it down?

185
00:10:47,300 --> 00:10:50,200
Because it's incredibly long.

186
00:10:50,200 --> 00:10:54,104
In fact, you probably-- So
how many pages of writing

187
00:10:54,104 --> 00:10:54,770
would this take?

188
00:10:54,770 --> 00:10:56,210
This is about a page of writing.

189
00:10:56,210 --> 00:10:58,950
So just think of you're
a machine, how much time

190
00:10:58,950 --> 00:11:01,660
you want to spend on this.

191
00:11:01,660 --> 00:11:05,430
So the answer is that
you have to be realistic.

192
00:11:05,430 --> 00:11:07,420
You're a human
being, not a machine.

193
00:11:07,420 --> 00:11:10,070
And so there's certain things
that you can write down

194
00:11:10,070 --> 00:11:12,510
and other things you should
not attempt to write down.

195
00:11:12,510 --> 00:11:17,770
So do not do this at home.

196
00:11:17,770 --> 00:11:21,180
So that's the first
down-side to this method.

197
00:11:21,180 --> 00:11:24,350
It gets more and more
complicated as time goes on.

198
00:11:24,350 --> 00:11:27,280
The second down-side, I
want to point out to you,

199
00:11:27,280 --> 00:11:35,100
is what's happening
with the pieces.

200
00:11:35,100 --> 00:11:42,830
So the pieces still
need to be integrated.

201
00:11:42,830 --> 00:11:48,130
We simplified this problem,
but we didn't get rid of it.

202
00:11:48,130 --> 00:11:50,890
We still have the problem
of integrating the pieces.

203
00:11:50,890 --> 00:11:52,740
Now, some of the
pieces are very easy.

204
00:11:52,740 --> 00:11:55,540
This top row here, the
antiderivatives of these,

205
00:11:55,540 --> 00:11:59,150
you can just write down.

206
00:11:59,150 --> 00:12:01,390
By advanced guessing.

207
00:12:01,390 --> 00:12:04,300
I'm going to skip over to the
most complicated one over here.

208
00:12:04,300 --> 00:12:06,220
For one second here.

209
00:12:06,220 --> 00:12:09,240
And what is it that you'd have
to deal with for that one.

210
00:12:09,240 --> 00:12:11,810
You'd have to deal
with, for example,

211
00:12:11,810 --> 00:12:21,660
so e.g., for example, I
need to deal with this guy.

212
00:12:21,660 --> 00:12:26,590
I've got to get this
antiderivative here.

213
00:12:26,590 --> 00:12:28,972
Now, this one you're
supposed to be able to know.

214
00:12:28,972 --> 00:12:30,430
So this is why I'm
mentioning this.

215
00:12:30,430 --> 00:12:33,270
Because this kind of
ingredient is something

216
00:12:33,270 --> 00:12:34,860
you already covered.

217
00:12:34,860 --> 00:12:35,740
And what is it?

218
00:12:35,740 --> 00:12:39,060
Well, you do this one
by advanced guessing,

219
00:12:39,060 --> 00:12:42,000
although you learned it as
the method of substitution.

220
00:12:42,000 --> 00:12:47,900
You realize that it's going to
be of the form (x^2 + 4)^(-2),

221
00:12:47,900 --> 00:12:49,400
roughly speaking.

222
00:12:49,400 --> 00:12:51,170
And now we're going to fix that.

223
00:12:51,170 --> 00:12:53,950
Because if you differentiate
it you get 2x times the -2,

224
00:12:53,950 --> 00:12:56,410
that's -4 times x times this.

225
00:12:56,410 --> 00:12:58,370
There's an x in
the numerator here.

226
00:12:58,370 --> 00:13:02,600
So it's -1/4 of that
will fix the factor.

227
00:13:02,600 --> 00:13:06,550
And here's the
answer for that one.

228
00:13:06,550 --> 00:13:10,560
So that's one you can do.

229
00:13:10,560 --> 00:13:19,020
The second piece is this guy.

230
00:13:19,020 --> 00:13:20,480
This is the other piece.

231
00:13:20,480 --> 00:13:25,680
Now, this was the piece
that came from B_3.

232
00:13:25,680 --> 00:13:27,170
This is the one
that came from B_3.

233
00:13:27,170 --> 00:13:30,430
And this is the one
that's coming from C_3.

234
00:13:30,430 --> 00:13:32,360
This is coming from C_3.

235
00:13:32,360 --> 00:13:35,000
We still need to get
this one out there.

236
00:13:35,000 --> 00:13:37,630
So C_3 times that will
be the correct answer,

237
00:13:37,630 --> 00:13:40,960
once we've found these numbers.

238
00:13:40,960 --> 00:13:44,160
So how do we do this?

239
00:13:44,160 --> 00:13:45,490
How's this one integrated?

240
00:13:45,490 --> 00:13:49,690
STUDENT: Trig substitution?

241
00:13:49,690 --> 00:13:51,640
PROFESSOR: Trig substitution.

242
00:13:51,640 --> 00:13:57,630
So the trig substitution
here is x = 2 tan u.

243
00:13:57,630 --> 00:14:00,800
Or 2 tan theta.

244
00:14:00,800 --> 00:14:03,860
And when you do that, there are
a couple of simplifications.

245
00:14:03,860 --> 00:14:06,450
Well, I wouldn't call
this a simplification.

246
00:14:06,450 --> 00:14:14,830
This is just the differentiation
formula. dx = 2 sec^2 u du.

247
00:14:14,830 --> 00:14:19,030
And then you have to plug in,
and you're using the fact that

248
00:14:19,030 --> 00:14:22,960
when you plug in the
tan^2, 4 tan ^2 + 4,

249
00:14:22,960 --> 00:14:24,370
you'll get a secant squared.

250
00:14:24,370 --> 00:14:32,240
So altogether, this
thing is, 2 sec^2 u du.

251
00:14:32,240 --> 00:14:40,300
And then there's a (4 sec^2
u)^3, in the denominator.

252
00:14:40,300 --> 00:14:44,340
So that's what happens when
you change variables here.

253
00:14:44,340 --> 00:14:46,790
And now look, this
keeps on going.

254
00:14:46,790 --> 00:14:49,120
This is not the
end of the problem.

255
00:14:49,120 --> 00:14:50,790
Because what does
that simplify to?

256
00:14:50,790 --> 00:14:57,860
That is, let's see, it's
2/64, the integral of sec^6

257
00:14:57,860 --> 00:14:58,620
and sec^2.

258
00:14:58,620 --> 00:15:00,090
That's the same as cos^4.

259
00:15:04,300 --> 00:15:06,370
And now, you did a
trig substitution

260
00:15:06,370 --> 00:15:11,140
but you still have
a trig integral.

261
00:15:11,140 --> 00:15:15,540
The trig integral now,
there's a method for this.

262
00:15:15,540 --> 00:15:18,730
The method for this is
when it's an even power,

263
00:15:18,730 --> 00:15:22,280
you have to use the
double angle formula.

264
00:15:22,280 --> 00:15:31,890
So that's this guy here.

265
00:15:31,890 --> 00:15:33,470
And you're still not done.

266
00:15:33,470 --> 00:15:35,040
You have to square
this thing out.

267
00:15:35,040 --> 00:15:37,120
And then you'll still
get a cos^2 (2u).

268
00:15:37,120 --> 00:15:38,160
And it keeps on going.

269
00:15:38,160 --> 00:15:41,737
So this thing goes
on for a long time.

270
00:15:41,737 --> 00:15:43,320
But I'm not even
going to finish this,

271
00:15:43,320 --> 00:15:44,780
but I just want to show you.

272
00:15:44,780 --> 00:15:46,450
The point is, we're
not showing you how

273
00:15:46,450 --> 00:15:48,270
to do any complicated problem.

274
00:15:48,270 --> 00:15:50,550
We're just showing you all
the little ingredients.

275
00:15:50,550 --> 00:15:52,050
And you have to
string them together

276
00:15:52,050 --> 00:15:56,170
a long, long, long process to
get to the final answer of one

277
00:15:56,170 --> 00:15:57,680
of these questions.

278
00:15:57,680 --> 00:16:07,300
So it always works,
but maybe slowly.

279
00:16:07,300 --> 00:16:13,440
By the way, there's even another
horrible thing that happens.

280
00:16:13,440 --> 00:16:22,669
Which is, if you handle this
guy here, what's the technique.

281
00:16:22,669 --> 00:16:24,460
This is another technique
that you learned,

282
00:16:24,460 --> 00:16:28,770
supposedly within
the last few days.

283
00:16:28,770 --> 00:16:30,810
Completing the square.

284
00:16:30,810 --> 00:16:39,020
So this, it turns out, you
have to rewrite it this way.

285
00:16:39,020 --> 00:16:42,530
And then the evaluation is going
to be expressed in terms of,

286
00:16:42,530 --> 00:16:44,440
I'm going to jump to the end.

287
00:16:44,440 --> 00:16:49,310
It's going to turn out to be
expressed in terms of this.

288
00:16:49,310 --> 00:16:53,940
That's what will eventually
show up in the formula.

289
00:16:53,940 --> 00:16:56,370
And not only that,
but if you deal

290
00:16:56,370 --> 00:16:59,890
with ones involving
x as well, you'll

291
00:16:59,890 --> 00:17:07,420
also need to deal with something
like log of this denominator

292
00:17:07,420 --> 00:17:09,560
here.

293
00:17:09,560 --> 00:17:13,120
So all of these things
will be involved.

294
00:17:13,120 --> 00:17:16,700
So now, the last message that
I have for you is just this.

295
00:17:16,700 --> 00:17:18,150
This thing is very complicated.

296
00:17:18,150 --> 00:17:20,150
We're certainly never
going to ask you to do it.

297
00:17:20,150 --> 00:17:23,160
But you should just be aware
that this level of complexity,

298
00:17:23,160 --> 00:17:26,690
we are absolutely stuck
with in this problem.

299
00:17:26,690 --> 00:17:29,580
And the reason why
we're stuck with it

300
00:17:29,580 --> 00:17:36,160
is that this is what the
formulas look like in the end.

301
00:17:36,160 --> 00:17:39,130
If the answers look
like this, the formulas

302
00:17:39,130 --> 00:17:41,045
have to be this complicated.

303
00:17:41,045 --> 00:17:43,170
If you differentiate this,
you get your polynomial,

304
00:17:43,170 --> 00:17:44,254
your ratio of polynomials.

305
00:17:44,254 --> 00:17:46,794
If you differentiate this, you
get some ratio of polynomials.

306
00:17:46,794 --> 00:17:48,480
These are the
things that come up

307
00:17:48,480 --> 00:17:51,710
when you take antiderivatives
of those rational functions.

308
00:17:51,710 --> 00:17:56,080
So we're just stuck
with these guys.

309
00:17:56,080 --> 00:17:58,770
And so don't let it
get to you too much.

310
00:17:58,770 --> 00:17:59,770
I mean, it's not so bad.

311
00:17:59,770 --> 00:18:01,510
In fact, there are
computer programs

312
00:18:01,510 --> 00:18:03,510
that will do this for
you anytime you want.

313
00:18:03,510 --> 00:18:05,800
And you just have to be
not intimidated by them.

314
00:18:05,800 --> 00:18:10,260
They're like other functions.

315
00:18:10,260 --> 00:18:20,600
OK, that's it for the general
comments on partial fractions.

316
00:18:20,600 --> 00:18:24,215
Now we're going to change
subjects to our last technique.

317
00:18:24,215 --> 00:18:25,840
This is one more
technical thing to get

318
00:18:25,840 --> 00:18:27,540
you familiar with functions.

319
00:18:27,540 --> 00:18:32,260
And this technique is
called integration by parts.

320
00:18:32,260 --> 00:18:34,580
Please, just because
its name sort

321
00:18:34,580 --> 00:18:35,957
of sounds like
partial fractions,

322
00:18:35,957 --> 00:18:37,290
don't think it's the same thing.

323
00:18:37,290 --> 00:18:38,450
It's totally different.

324
00:18:38,450 --> 00:18:44,340
It's not the same.

325
00:18:44,340 --> 00:19:06,640
So this one is called
integration by parts.

326
00:19:06,640 --> 00:19:09,570
Now, unlike the previous case,
where I couldn't actually

327
00:19:09,570 --> 00:19:12,736
justify to you that the
linear algebra always works.

328
00:19:12,736 --> 00:19:14,860
I claimed it worked, but
I wasn't able to prove it.

329
00:19:14,860 --> 00:19:17,390
That's a complicated
theorem which I'm not

330
00:19:17,390 --> 00:19:19,560
able to do in this class.

331
00:19:19,560 --> 00:19:22,270
Here I can explain to
you what's going on

332
00:19:22,270 --> 00:19:24,200
with integration by parts.

333
00:19:24,200 --> 00:19:26,600
It's just the fundamental
theorem of calculus,

334
00:19:26,600 --> 00:19:30,430
if you like, coupled
with the product formula.

335
00:19:30,430 --> 00:19:33,740
Sort of unwound and
read in reverse.

336
00:19:33,740 --> 00:19:35,610
And here's how that works.

337
00:19:35,610 --> 00:19:38,480
If you take the product of two
functions and you differentiate

338
00:19:38,480 --> 00:19:41,910
them, then we know that the
product rule says that this is

339
00:19:41,910 --> 00:19:45,790
u'v + uv'.

340
00:19:45,790 --> 00:19:50,400
And now I'm just going to
rearrange in the following way.

341
00:19:50,400 --> 00:19:53,370
I'm going to solve for uv'.

342
00:19:53,370 --> 00:19:54,710
That is, this term here.

343
00:19:54,710 --> 00:19:56,370
So what is this term?

344
00:19:56,370 --> 00:19:59,990
It's this other term, (uv)'.

345
00:19:59,990 --> 00:20:04,520
Minus the other piece.

346
00:20:04,520 --> 00:20:08,360
So I just rewrote this equation.

347
00:20:08,360 --> 00:20:10,900
And now I'm going
to integrate it.

348
00:20:10,900 --> 00:20:11,860
So here's the formula.

349
00:20:11,860 --> 00:20:15,160
The integral of
the left-hand side

350
00:20:15,160 --> 00:20:17,200
is equal to the integral
of the right-hand side.

351
00:20:17,200 --> 00:20:18,670
Well when I integrate
a derivative,

352
00:20:18,670 --> 00:20:21,070
of I get back the
function itself.

353
00:20:21,070 --> 00:20:27,010
That's the fundamental theorem.

354
00:20:27,010 --> 00:20:27,600
So this is it.

355
00:20:27,600 --> 00:20:30,500
Sorry, I missed the
dx, which is important.

356
00:20:30,500 --> 00:20:32,460
I apologize.

357
00:20:32,460 --> 00:20:35,410
Let's put that in there.

358
00:20:35,410 --> 00:20:41,540
So this is the integration
by parts formula.

359
00:20:41,540 --> 00:20:46,760
I'm going to write it one more
time with the limits stuck in.

360
00:20:46,760 --> 00:21:02,170
It's also written this way, when
you have a definite integral.

361
00:21:02,170 --> 00:21:13,260
Just the same formula,
written twice.

362
00:21:13,260 --> 00:21:14,910
Alright, now I'm
going to show you

363
00:21:14,910 --> 00:21:24,360
how it works on a few examples.

364
00:21:24,360 --> 00:21:29,470
And I have to give you a
flavor for how it works.

365
00:21:29,470 --> 00:21:34,230
But it'll grow as we get
more and more experience.

366
00:21:34,230 --> 00:21:38,360
The first example
that I'm going to take

367
00:21:38,360 --> 00:21:43,040
is one that looks intractable
on the face of it.

368
00:21:43,040 --> 00:21:49,740
Which is the
integral of ln x dx.

369
00:21:49,740 --> 00:21:52,560
Now, it looks like there's sort
of nothing we can do with this.

370
00:21:52,560 --> 00:21:55,310
And we don't know
what the solution is.

371
00:21:55,310 --> 00:21:59,480
However, I claim that if
we fit it into this form,

372
00:21:59,480 --> 00:22:03,100
we can figure out what the
integral is relatively easily.

373
00:22:03,100 --> 00:22:07,160
By some little magic of
cancellation, it happens.

374
00:22:07,160 --> 00:22:08,960
The idea is the following.

375
00:22:08,960 --> 00:22:13,130
If I consider this
function to be u,

376
00:22:13,130 --> 00:22:15,680
then what's going to
appear on the other side

377
00:22:15,680 --> 00:22:19,540
in the integrated form
is the function u', which

378
00:22:19,540 --> 00:22:22,680
is-- so, if you like, u = ln x.

379
00:22:22,680 --> 00:22:25,620
So u' = 1 / x.

380
00:22:25,620 --> 00:22:28,680
Now, 1 / x is a more
manageable function than ln x.

381
00:22:28,680 --> 00:22:31,370
What we're using is that when
we differentiate the function,

382
00:22:31,370 --> 00:22:33,100
it's getting nicer.

383
00:22:33,100 --> 00:22:36,830
It's getting more
tractable for us.

384
00:22:36,830 --> 00:22:38,860
In order for this to
fit into this pattern,

385
00:22:38,860 --> 00:22:45,410
however, I need a function
v. So what in the world

386
00:22:45,410 --> 00:22:48,220
am I going to put here for v?

387
00:22:48,220 --> 00:22:51,920
The answer is, well, dx is
almost the right answer.

388
00:22:51,920 --> 00:22:53,860
The answer turns out to be x.

389
00:22:53,860 --> 00:23:01,260
And the reason is that
that makes v' = 1.

390
00:23:01,260 --> 00:23:02,630
It makes v' = 1.

391
00:23:02,630 --> 00:23:05,560
So that means that this
is u, but it's also uv'.

392
00:23:05,560 --> 00:23:11,240
Which was what I had
on the left-hand side.

393
00:23:11,240 --> 00:23:13,470
So it's both u and uv'.

394
00:23:13,470 --> 00:23:14,710
So this is the setup.

395
00:23:14,710 --> 00:23:19,300
And now all I'm going to do is
read off what the formula says.

396
00:23:19,300 --> 00:23:24,190
What it says is, this is
equal to u times v. So u

397
00:23:24,190 --> 00:23:25,270
is this and v is that.

398
00:23:25,270 --> 00:23:32,440
So it's x ln x minus, so
that again, this is uv.

399
00:23:32,440 --> 00:23:37,170
Except in the other order, vu.

400
00:23:37,170 --> 00:23:40,510
And then I'm integrating, and
what do I have to integrate?

401
00:23:40,510 --> 00:23:42,540
u'v. So look up there.

402
00:23:42,540 --> 00:23:47,760
u'v with a minus sign here.
u' = 1 / x, and v = x.

403
00:23:47,760 --> 00:23:50,890
So it's 1 / x, that's u'.

404
00:23:50,890 --> 00:23:56,070
And here is x, that's v, dx.

405
00:23:56,070 --> 00:23:58,270
Now, that one is
easy to integrate.

406
00:23:58,270 --> 00:24:00,870
Because (1/x) x = 1.

407
00:24:00,870 --> 00:24:07,630
And the integral of 1 dx
is x, plus c, if you like.

408
00:24:07,630 --> 00:24:10,510
So the antiderivative of 1 is x.

409
00:24:10,510 --> 00:24:11,610
And so here's our answer.

410
00:24:11,610 --> 00:24:34,480
Our answer is that
this is x ln x - x + c.

411
00:24:34,480 --> 00:24:37,610
I'm going to do two
more slightly more

412
00:24:37,610 --> 00:24:39,380
complicated examples.

413
00:24:39,380 --> 00:24:42,590
And then really,
the main thing is

414
00:24:42,590 --> 00:24:44,580
to get yourself
used to this method.

415
00:24:44,580 --> 00:24:47,930
And there's no one
way of doing that.

416
00:24:47,930 --> 00:24:49,970
Just practice makes perfect.

417
00:24:49,970 --> 00:24:53,070
And so we'll just do
a few more examples.

418
00:24:53,070 --> 00:24:55,870
And illustrate them.

419
00:24:55,870 --> 00:24:59,960
The second example that I'm
going to use is the integral

420
00:24:59,960 --> 00:25:03,590
of (ln x)^2 dx.

421
00:25:03,590 --> 00:25:08,510
And this is just slightly
more recalcitrant.

422
00:25:08,510 --> 00:25:13,270
Namely, I'm going to
let u be (ln x)^2.

423
00:25:17,740 --> 00:25:20,440
And again, v = x.

424
00:25:20,440 --> 00:25:21,890
So that matches up here.

425
00:25:21,890 --> 00:25:23,730
That is, v' = 1.

426
00:25:23,730 --> 00:25:28,390
So this is uv'.

427
00:25:28,390 --> 00:25:31,440
So this thing is uv'.

428
00:25:31,440 --> 00:25:33,510
And then we'll just
see what happens.

429
00:25:33,510 --> 00:25:38,060
Now, the game that we get
is that when I differentiate

430
00:25:38,060 --> 00:25:42,870
the logarithm squared, I'm going
to to get something simpler.

431
00:25:42,870 --> 00:25:46,850
It's not going to win
us the whole battle,

432
00:25:46,850 --> 00:25:49,860
but it will get us started.

433
00:25:49,860 --> 00:25:51,770
So here we get u'.

434
00:25:51,770 --> 00:25:56,650
And that's 2 ln x times 1/x.

435
00:25:56,650 --> 00:26:00,470
Applying the chain rule.

436
00:26:00,470 --> 00:26:06,020
And so the formula is
that this is x (ln x)^2,

437
00:26:06,020 --> 00:26:11,710
minus the integral of,
well it's u'v, right,

438
00:26:11,710 --> 00:26:13,210
that's what I have
to put over here.

439
00:26:13,210 --> 00:26:22,190
So u' = 2 ln x 1/x and v = x.

440
00:26:22,190 --> 00:26:25,880
And so now, you notice something
interesting happening here.

441
00:26:25,880 --> 00:26:28,960
So let me just demarcate
this a little bit.

442
00:26:28,960 --> 00:26:34,680
And let you see what it
is that I'm doing here.

443
00:26:34,680 --> 00:26:36,820
So notice, this is
the same integral.

444
00:26:36,820 --> 00:26:38,650
So here we have x (ln x)^2.

445
00:26:38,650 --> 00:26:41,050
We've already solved that part.

446
00:26:41,050 --> 00:26:43,870
But now know notice that
the 1/x and the x cancel.

447
00:26:43,870 --> 00:26:46,890
So we're back to
the previous case.

448
00:26:46,890 --> 00:26:49,570
We didn't win all the way, but
actually we reduced ourselves

449
00:26:49,570 --> 00:26:51,350
to this integral.

450
00:26:51,350 --> 00:26:56,630
To the integral of ln x,
which we already know.

451
00:26:56,630 --> 00:26:58,700
So here, I can copy that down.

452
00:26:58,700 --> 00:27:04,450
That's - -2(x ln x - x),
and then I have to throw

453
00:27:04,450 --> 00:27:05,460
in a constant, c.

454
00:27:05,460 --> 00:27:07,270
And that's the end
of the problem here.

455
00:27:07,270 --> 00:27:10,260
That's it.

456
00:27:10,260 --> 00:27:26,400
So this piece, I
got from Example 1.

457
00:27:26,400 --> 00:27:34,350
Now, this illustrates
a principle

458
00:27:34,350 --> 00:27:36,200
which is a little
bit more complicated

459
00:27:36,200 --> 00:27:40,390
than just the one of
integration by parts.

460
00:27:40,390 --> 00:27:43,630
Which is a sort of a
general principle which

461
00:27:43,630 --> 00:27:48,150
I'll call my Example 3,
which is something which

462
00:27:48,150 --> 00:27:56,520
is called a reduction formula.

463
00:27:56,520 --> 00:28:00,540
A reduction formula is a
case where we apply some rule

464
00:28:00,540 --> 00:28:03,220
and we figure out one
of these integrals

465
00:28:03,220 --> 00:28:05,440
in terms of something else.

466
00:28:05,440 --> 00:28:07,320
Which is a little bit simpler.

467
00:28:07,320 --> 00:28:09,070
And eventually we'll
get down to the end,

468
00:28:09,070 --> 00:28:12,810
but it may take us n
steps from the beginning.

469
00:28:12,810 --> 00:28:17,541
So the example is (ln x)^n dx.

470
00:28:17,541 --> 00:28:18,040
.

471
00:28:18,040 --> 00:28:21,710
And the claim is that if I
do what I did in Example 2,

472
00:28:21,710 --> 00:28:26,500
to this case, I'll get a
simpler one which will involve

473
00:28:26,500 --> 00:28:28,224
the (n-1)st power.

474
00:28:28,224 --> 00:28:29,640
And that way I can
get all the way

475
00:28:29,640 --> 00:28:32,440
back down to the final answer.

476
00:28:32,440 --> 00:28:34,160
So here's what happens.

477
00:28:34,160 --> 00:28:37,090
We take u as (ln x)^n.

478
00:28:37,090 --> 00:28:40,980
This is the same discussion
as before, v = x.

479
00:28:40,980 --> 00:28:44,850
And then u' is n n
(ln x)^(n-1) 1/x.

480
00:28:47,440 --> 00:28:50,020
And v' is 1.

481
00:28:50,020 --> 00:28:52,800
And so the setup is similar.

482
00:28:52,800 --> 00:28:59,320
We have here x (ln x)^n
minus the integral.

483
00:28:59,320 --> 00:29:05,020
And there's n times, it
turns out to be (ln x)^(n-1).

484
00:29:05,020 --> 00:29:26,410
And then there's a 1/x
and an x, which cancel.

485
00:29:26,410 --> 00:29:31,010
So I'm going to explain
this also abstractly

486
00:29:31,010 --> 00:29:35,450
a little bit just to show
you what's happening here.

487
00:29:35,450 --> 00:29:44,360
If you use the notation F_n(x)
is the integral of (ln x)^n dx,

488
00:29:44,360 --> 00:29:46,780
and we're going to
forget the constant here.

489
00:29:46,780 --> 00:29:51,710
Then the relationship that we
have here is that F_n(x) is

490
00:29:51,710 --> 00:29:56,590
equal to n ln-- I'm
sorry, x (ln x)^n.

491
00:29:56,590 --> 00:29:59,490
That's the first term over here.

492
00:29:59,490 --> 00:30:03,650
Minus n times the preceding one.

493
00:30:03,650 --> 00:30:07,670
This one here.

494
00:30:07,670 --> 00:30:11,060
And the idea is that
eventually we can get down.

495
00:30:11,060 --> 00:30:15,010
If we start with the nth one, we
have a formula that includes--

496
00:30:15,010 --> 00:30:17,440
So the reduction is
to the n (n-1)st.

497
00:30:17,440 --> 00:30:21,280
Then we can reduce to
the (n-2)nd and so on.

498
00:30:21,280 --> 00:30:23,610
Until we reduce to
the 1, the first one.

499
00:30:23,610 --> 00:30:29,390
And then in fact we can
even go down to the 0th one.

500
00:30:29,390 --> 00:30:32,510
So this is the idea of
a reduction formula.

501
00:30:32,510 --> 00:30:37,320
And let me illustrate it exactly
in the context of Examples 1

502
00:30:37,320 --> 00:30:38,870
and 2.

503
00:30:38,870 --> 00:30:44,670
So the first step would be
to evaluate the first one.

504
00:30:44,670 --> 00:30:48,190
Which is, if you
like, (ln x)^0 dx.

505
00:30:48,190 --> 00:30:52,370
That's very easy, that's x.

506
00:30:52,370 --> 00:31:01,000
And then F_1(x) =
x ln x - F_0(x).

507
00:31:01,000 --> 00:31:03,240
Now, that's applying this rule.

508
00:31:03,240 --> 00:31:06,830
So let me just put
it in a box here.

509
00:31:06,830 --> 00:31:09,380
This is the method of induction.

510
00:31:09,380 --> 00:31:13,510
Here's the rule.

511
00:31:13,510 --> 00:31:21,930
And I'm applying it for n = 1.

512
00:31:21,930 --> 00:31:23,810
I plugged in n = 1 here.

513
00:31:23,810 --> 00:31:26,720
So here, I have x
(ln x)^1 - 1*F_0(x).

514
00:31:32,430 --> 00:31:39,240
And that's what I put right
here, on the right-hand side.

515
00:31:39,240 --> 00:31:42,440
And that's going to generate
for me the formula that I want,

516
00:31:42,440 --> 00:31:44,920
which is x ln x - x.

517
00:31:44,920 --> 00:31:49,160
That's the answer to
this problem over here.

518
00:31:49,160 --> 00:31:51,230
This was Example 1.

519
00:31:51,230 --> 00:31:52,980
Notice I dropped the
constants because I

520
00:31:52,980 --> 00:31:54,880
can add them in at the end.

521
00:31:54,880 --> 00:31:57,590
So I'll put in
parentheses here, plus c.

522
00:31:57,590 --> 00:32:01,850
That's what would happen
at the end of the problem.

523
00:32:01,850 --> 00:32:10,320
The next step, so that was
Example 1, and now Example 2

524
00:32:10,320 --> 00:32:12,190
works more or less the same way.

525
00:32:12,190 --> 00:32:14,590
I'm just summarizing what
I did on that blackboard

526
00:32:14,590 --> 00:32:16,640
right up here.

527
00:32:16,640 --> 00:32:21,030
The same thing, but in
much more compact notation.

528
00:32:21,030 --> 00:32:29,950
If I take F_2(x), that's going
to be equal to x (ln x)^2 -

529
00:32:29,950 --> 00:32:31,820
2 F_1(x).

530
00:32:31,820 --> 00:32:41,550
Again, this is box for n = 2.

531
00:32:41,550 --> 00:32:46,730
And if I plug it in, what I'm
getting here is x (ln x)^2

532
00:32:46,730 --> 00:32:49,570
minus twice this stuff here.

533
00:32:49,570 --> 00:32:55,780
Which is right here. x ln x - x.

534
00:32:55,780 --> 00:32:58,580
If you like, plus c.

535
00:32:58,580 --> 00:33:07,360
So I'll leave the c off.

536
00:33:07,360 --> 00:33:12,170
So this is how reduction
formulas work in general.

537
00:33:12,170 --> 00:33:22,620
I'm going to give you one more
example of a reduction formula.

538
00:33:22,620 --> 00:33:30,560
So I guess we have to
call this Example 4.

539
00:33:30,560 --> 00:33:34,050
Let's be fancy, let's
make it the sine.

540
00:33:34,050 --> 00:33:35,950
No no, no, let's
be fancier still.

541
00:33:35,950 --> 00:33:48,790
Let's make it e^x So this would
also work for cos x and sin x.

542
00:33:48,790 --> 00:33:50,110
The same sort of thing.

543
00:33:50,110 --> 00:33:52,840
And I should mention
that on your homework,

544
00:33:52,840 --> 00:33:54,300
you have to do it for cos x.

545
00:33:54,300 --> 00:33:56,550
I decided to change my mind
on the spur of the moment.

546
00:33:56,550 --> 00:33:57,924
I'm not going to
do it for cosine

547
00:33:57,924 --> 00:34:00,530
because you have to work it out
on your homework for cosine.

548
00:34:00,530 --> 00:34:03,100
In a later homework
you'll even do this case.

549
00:34:03,100 --> 00:34:05,190
So it's fine.

550
00:34:05,190 --> 00:34:07,400
You need the practice.

551
00:34:07,400 --> 00:34:10,240
OK, so how am I going
to do it this time.

552
00:34:10,240 --> 00:34:13,970
This is again, a
reduction formula.

553
00:34:13,970 --> 00:34:19,420
And the trick here is to pick
u to be this function here.

554
00:34:19,420 --> 00:34:20,780
And the reason is the following.

555
00:34:20,780 --> 00:34:23,029
So it's very important to
pick which function is the u

556
00:34:23,029 --> 00:34:26,450
and which function is the v.
That's the only decision you

557
00:34:26,450 --> 00:34:30,020
have to make if you're going
to apply integration by parts.

558
00:34:30,020 --> 00:34:34,420
When I pick this function as
the u, the advantage that I have

559
00:34:34,420 --> 00:34:38,150
is that u' is simpler.

560
00:34:38,150 --> 00:34:39,630
How is it simpler?

561
00:34:39,630 --> 00:34:42,820
It's simpler because
it's one degree down.

562
00:34:42,820 --> 00:34:45,420
So that's making
progress for us.

563
00:34:45,420 --> 00:34:48,820
On the other hand,
this function here

564
00:34:48,820 --> 00:34:52,530
is going to be what
I'll use for v.

565
00:34:52,530 --> 00:34:55,279
And if I differentiated that,
if I did it the other way around

566
00:34:55,279 --> 00:34:57,070
and I differentiated
that, I would just get

567
00:34:57,070 --> 00:34:58,900
the same level of complexity.

568
00:34:58,900 --> 00:35:01,120
Differentiating e^x
just gives you back e^x.

569
00:35:01,120 --> 00:35:02,000
So that's boring.

570
00:35:02,000 --> 00:35:05,750
It doesn't make any
progress in this process.

571
00:35:05,750 --> 00:35:11,460
And so I'm going to instead
let v = e^x and-- Sorry,

572
00:35:11,460 --> 00:35:12,830
this is v'.

573
00:35:12,830 --> 00:35:14,380
Make it v' = e^x.

574
00:35:14,380 --> 00:35:15,950
And then v = e^x.

575
00:35:15,950 --> 00:35:20,640
At least it isn't any worse
when I went backwards like that.

576
00:35:20,640 --> 00:35:28,150
So now, I have u and v',
and now I get x^n e^x.

577
00:35:28,150 --> 00:35:31,490
This again is u, and this is v.
So it happens that v is equal

578
00:35:31,490 --> 00:35:34,200
to v ' so it's a
little confusing here.

579
00:35:34,200 --> 00:35:37,640
But this is the one
we're calling v'.

580
00:35:37,640 --> 00:35:41,510
And here's v. And now minus
the integral and I have here

581
00:35:41,510 --> 00:35:43,760
nx^(n-1).

582
00:35:43,760 --> 00:35:45,120
And I have here e^x.

583
00:35:45,120 --> 00:35:52,060
So this is u' and this is v dx.

584
00:35:52,060 --> 00:35:55,180
So this recurrence
is a new recurrence.

585
00:35:55,180 --> 00:35:57,050
And let me summarize it here.

586
00:35:57,050 --> 00:36:02,270
It's saying that G_n(x) should
be the integral of x^n e^x dx.

587
00:36:05,210 --> 00:36:06,810
Again, I'm dropping the c.

588
00:36:06,810 --> 00:36:17,060
And then the reduction formula
is that G_n(x) is equal to this

589
00:36:17,060 --> 00:36:25,300
expression here: x^n
e^x - n*G_(n-1)(x).

590
00:36:25,300 --> 00:36:32,830
So here's our reduction formula.

591
00:36:32,830 --> 00:36:37,912
And to illustrate
this, if I take G_0(x),

592
00:36:37,912 --> 00:36:39,870
if you think about it
for a second that's just,

593
00:36:39,870 --> 00:36:40,744
there's nothing here.

594
00:36:40,744 --> 00:36:44,680
The antiderivative of e^x,
that's going to be e^x,

595
00:36:44,680 --> 00:36:48,220
that's getting started at
the real basement here.

596
00:36:48,220 --> 00:36:52,000
Again, as always, 0
is my favorite number.

597
00:36:52,000 --> 00:36:52,820
Not 1.

598
00:36:52,820 --> 00:36:55,850
I always start with the
easiest one, if possible.

599
00:36:55,850 --> 00:37:00,150
And now G_1, applying
this formula,

600
00:37:00,150 --> 00:37:06,830
is going to be equal
to x e^x - G_0(x).

601
00:37:06,830 --> 00:37:11,180
Which is just-- Right,
because n is 1 and n - 1 is 0.

602
00:37:11,180 --> 00:37:13,970
And so that's just
^ x e^x - e^x.

603
00:37:17,220 --> 00:37:19,770
So this is a very,
very fancy way

604
00:37:19,770 --> 00:37:22,620
of saying the following fact.

605
00:37:22,620 --> 00:37:32,210
I'll put it over on
this other board.

606
00:37:32,210 --> 00:37:38,270
Which is that the integral of
x e^x dx is equal to x e^x -

607
00:37:38,270 --> 00:37:44,600
x + c.

608
00:37:44,600 --> 00:37:45,270
Yeah, question.

609
00:37:45,270 --> 00:37:50,950
STUDENT: [INAUDIBLE]

610
00:37:50,950 --> 00:37:53,020
PROFESSOR: The question
is, why is this true.

611
00:37:53,020 --> 00:37:54,830
Why is this statement true.

612
00:37:54,830 --> 00:37:56,420
Why is G_0 equal to e^x.

613
00:37:56,420 --> 00:37:58,410
I did that in my head.

614
00:37:58,410 --> 00:38:02,910
What I did was, I first wrote
down the formula for G_0.

615
00:38:02,910 --> 00:38:08,100
Which was G_0 is equal to
the integral of e^x dx.

616
00:38:11,076 --> 00:38:12,950
Because there's an x to
the 0 power in there,

617
00:38:12,950 --> 00:38:15,010
which is just 1.

618
00:38:15,010 --> 00:38:17,780
And then I know the
antiderivative of e^x.

619
00:38:17,780 --> 00:38:23,230
It's e^x.

620
00:38:23,230 --> 00:38:30,780
STUDENT: [INAUDIBLE]

621
00:38:30,780 --> 00:38:33,030
PROFESSOR: How do you know
when this method will work?

622
00:38:33,030 --> 00:38:37,370
The answer is only
by experience.

623
00:38:37,370 --> 00:38:40,091
You must get
practice doing this.

624
00:38:40,091 --> 00:38:41,590
If you look in your
textbook, you'll

625
00:38:41,590 --> 00:38:44,430
see hints as to what to do.

626
00:38:44,430 --> 00:38:46,050
The other hint
that I want to say

627
00:38:46,050 --> 00:38:48,180
is that if you
find that you have

628
00:38:48,180 --> 00:38:51,000
one factor in your expression
which when you differentiate

629
00:38:51,000 --> 00:38:52,590
it, it gets easier.

630
00:38:52,590 --> 00:38:55,140
And when you antidifferentiate
the other half,

631
00:38:55,140 --> 00:38:57,780
it doesn't get any
worse, then that's

632
00:38:57,780 --> 00:39:01,790
when this method has
a chance of helping.

633
00:39:01,790 --> 00:39:04,430
And there is-- there's
no general thing.

634
00:39:04,430 --> 00:39:09,330
The thing is, though, if you
do it with x^n e^x, x^n cos x,

635
00:39:09,330 --> 00:39:11,970
x^n sin x, those are
examples where it works.

636
00:39:11,970 --> 00:39:15,600
This power of the log.

637
00:39:15,600 --> 00:39:19,150
I'll give you one
more example here.

638
00:39:19,150 --> 00:39:26,519
So this was G_1(x), right.

639
00:39:26,519 --> 00:39:28,310
I'll give you one more
example in a second.

640
00:39:28,310 --> 00:39:29,330
Yeah.

641
00:39:29,330 --> 00:39:33,220
STUDENT: [INAUDIBLE]

642
00:39:33,220 --> 00:39:35,680
PROFESSOR: Thank you.

643
00:39:35,680 --> 00:39:38,490
There's a mistake here.

644
00:39:38,490 --> 00:39:39,240
That's bad.

645
00:39:39,240 --> 00:39:45,910
I was thinking in the back of my
head of the following formula.

646
00:39:45,910 --> 00:39:51,159
Which is another one
which we've just done.

647
00:39:51,159 --> 00:39:53,450
So these are the types of
formulas that you can get out

648
00:39:53,450 --> 00:39:57,620
of integration by parts.

649
00:39:57,620 --> 00:40:00,650
There's also another way of
getting these, which I'm not

650
00:40:00,650 --> 00:40:02,240
going to say anything about.

651
00:40:02,240 --> 00:40:04,282
Which is called
advance guessing.

652
00:40:04,282 --> 00:40:06,740
You guess in advance what the
form is, you differentiate it

653
00:40:06,740 --> 00:40:08,160
and you check.

654
00:40:08,160 --> 00:40:14,250
That does work too, with
many of these cases.

655
00:40:14,250 --> 00:40:21,580
I want to give you
an illustration.

656
00:40:21,580 --> 00:40:30,760
Just because, you know, these
formulas are somewhat dry.

657
00:40:30,760 --> 00:40:34,570
So I want to give you just
at least one application.

658
00:40:34,570 --> 00:40:42,230
We're almost done with the
idea of these formulas.

659
00:40:42,230 --> 00:40:44,880
And we're going to
get back now to being

660
00:40:44,880 --> 00:40:47,990
able to handle lots more
integrals than we could before.

661
00:40:47,990 --> 00:40:49,810
And what's satisfying
is that now we

662
00:40:49,810 --> 00:40:53,830
can get numbers out instead
of being stuck and hamstrung

663
00:40:53,830 --> 00:40:55,120
with only a few techniques.

664
00:40:55,120 --> 00:40:57,680
Now we have all of the
techniques of integration

665
00:40:57,680 --> 00:40:59,250
that anybody has.

666
00:40:59,250 --> 00:41:01,820
And so we can do
pretty much anything

667
00:41:01,820 --> 00:41:04,430
we want that's possible to do.

668
00:41:04,430 --> 00:41:14,250
So here's, if you like,
an application that

669
00:41:14,250 --> 00:41:18,890
illustrates how integration
by parts can be helpful.

670
00:41:18,890 --> 00:41:27,030
And we're going to find the
volume of an exponential wine

671
00:41:27,030 --> 00:41:34,290
glass here.

672
00:41:34,290 --> 00:41:38,350
Again, don't try
this at home, but.

673
00:41:38,350 --> 00:41:40,500
So let's see.

674
00:41:40,500 --> 00:41:44,660
It's going to be this
beautiful guy here.

675
00:41:44,660 --> 00:41:46,930
I think.

676
00:41:46,930 --> 00:41:49,060
OK, so what's it going to be.

677
00:41:49,060 --> 00:41:52,780
This graph is going
to be y = e^x.

678
00:41:52,780 --> 00:42:04,030
Then we're going to rotate
it around the y-axis.

679
00:42:04,030 --> 00:42:10,290
And this level here
is the height y = 1.

680
00:42:10,290 --> 00:42:12,990
And the top, let's
say, is y = e.

681
00:42:12,990 --> 00:42:22,160
So that the horizontal
here, coming down, is x = 1.

682
00:42:22,160 --> 00:42:35,050
Now, there are two ways
to set up this problem.

683
00:42:35,050 --> 00:42:40,050
And so there are two methods.

684
00:42:40,050 --> 00:42:44,110
And this is also a good
review because, of course,

685
00:42:44,110 --> 00:42:46,330
we did this in the last unit.

686
00:42:46,330 --> 00:42:58,480
The two methods are horizontal
and vertical slices.

687
00:42:58,480 --> 00:43:00,660
Those are the two
ways we can do this.

688
00:43:00,660 --> 00:43:03,710
Now, if we do it with--
So let's start out

689
00:43:03,710 --> 00:43:09,370
with the horizontal ones.

690
00:43:09,370 --> 00:43:12,370
That's this shape here.

691
00:43:12,370 --> 00:43:15,370
And we're going like that.

692
00:43:15,370 --> 00:43:19,900
And the horizontal slices
mean that this little bit here

693
00:43:19,900 --> 00:43:22,842
is of thickness dy.

694
00:43:22,842 --> 00:43:24,550
And then we're going
to wrap that around.

695
00:43:24,550 --> 00:43:30,810
So this is going
to become a disk.

696
00:43:30,810 --> 00:43:34,070
This is the method of disks.

697
00:43:34,070 --> 00:43:35,830
And what's this distance here?

698
00:43:35,830 --> 00:43:37,770
Well, this place is x.

699
00:43:37,770 --> 00:43:40,680
And so the disk has area pi x^2.

700
00:43:40,680 --> 00:43:42,840
And we're going to
add up the thickness

701
00:43:42,840 --> 00:43:45,730
of the disks and we're going
to integrate from 1 to e.

702
00:43:45,730 --> 00:43:51,930
So here's our volume.

703
00:43:51,930 --> 00:43:54,510
And now we have one last
little item of business

704
00:43:54,510 --> 00:43:56,230
before we can evaluate
this integral.

705
00:43:56,230 --> 00:43:58,480
And that is that we need to
know the relationship here

706
00:43:58,480 --> 00:44:01,360
on the curve, that y = e^x.

707
00:44:01,360 --> 00:44:07,490
So that means x = ln y.

708
00:44:07,490 --> 00:44:09,180
And in order to
evaluate this integral,

709
00:44:09,180 --> 00:44:13,050
we have to evaluate x
correctly as a function of y.

710
00:44:13,050 --> 00:44:26,200
So that's the integral from 1
to e of (ln y)^2, times pi, dy.

711
00:44:26,200 --> 00:44:27,860
So now you see that
this is an integral

712
00:44:27,860 --> 00:44:30,140
that we did calculate already.

713
00:44:30,140 --> 00:44:34,280
And in fact, it's
sitting right here.

714
00:44:34,280 --> 00:44:37,030
Except with the variable x
instead of the variable y.

715
00:44:37,030 --> 00:44:44,830
So the answer, which we already
had, is this F_2(y) here.

716
00:44:44,830 --> 00:44:47,820
So maybe I'll write it that way.

717
00:44:47,820 --> 00:44:52,010
So this is F_2(y)
between 1 and e.

718
00:44:52,010 --> 00:45:00,040
And now let's figure
out what it is.

719
00:45:00,040 --> 00:45:02,060
It's written over there.

720
00:45:02,060 --> 00:45:15,100
It's y (ln y)^2 - 2(y ln y - y).

721
00:45:15,100 --> 00:45:24,460
The whole thing
evaluated at 1, e.

722
00:45:24,460 --> 00:45:29,130
And that is, if I plug
in e here, I get e.

723
00:45:29,130 --> 00:45:32,150
Except there's a factor
of pi there, sorry.

724
00:45:32,150 --> 00:45:36,360
Missed the pi factor.

725
00:45:36,360 --> 00:45:38,780
So there's an e here.

726
00:45:38,780 --> 00:45:43,050
And then I subtract off,
well, at 1 this is e - e.

727
00:45:43,050 --> 00:45:44,330
So it cancels.

728
00:45:44,330 --> 00:45:45,440
There's nothing left.

729
00:45:45,440 --> 00:45:50,200
And then at 1, I
get ln 1 is 0, ln 1

730
00:45:50,200 --> 00:45:53,500
is 0, there's only one
term left, which is 2.

731
00:45:53,500 --> 00:45:55,720
So it's -2.

732
00:45:55,720 --> 00:46:03,790
That's the answer.

733
00:46:03,790 --> 00:46:10,830
Now we get to compare
that with what happens

734
00:46:10,830 --> 00:46:15,950
if we do it the other way.

735
00:46:15,950 --> 00:46:19,870
So what's the vertical?

736
00:46:19,870 --> 00:46:31,830
So by vertical
slicing, we get shells.

737
00:46:31,830 --> 00:46:38,530
And that starts-- That's
in the x variable.

738
00:46:38,530 --> 00:46:43,480
It starts at 0 and
ends at 1 and it's dx.

739
00:46:43,480 --> 00:46:46,300
And what are the shells?

740
00:46:46,300 --> 00:46:51,750
Well, the shells are, if I
can draw the picture again,

741
00:46:51,750 --> 00:46:55,120
they start-- the top value is e.

742
00:46:55,120 --> 00:47:02,530
And the bottom value is, I need
a little bit of room for this.

743
00:47:02,530 --> 00:47:06,810
The bottom value is y.

744
00:47:06,810 --> 00:47:12,670
And then we have 2 pi
x is the circumference,

745
00:47:12,670 --> 00:47:15,970
as we sweep it around dx.

746
00:47:15,970 --> 00:47:18,260
So here's our new volume.

747
00:47:18,260 --> 00:47:23,600
Expressed in this different way.

748
00:47:23,600 --> 00:47:26,220
So now I'm going to
plug in what this is.

749
00:47:26,220 --> 00:47:30,380
It's the integral from
0 to 1 of e minus e^x,

750
00:47:30,380 --> 00:47:36,530
that's the formula
for y, 2 pi x dx.

751
00:47:36,530 --> 00:47:39,670
And what you see is that
you get the integral

752
00:47:39,670 --> 00:47:45,150
from 0 to 1 of 2 pi e x dx.

753
00:47:45,150 --> 00:47:46,540
That's easy, right?

754
00:47:46,540 --> 00:47:51,940
That's just 2 pi e times 1/2.

755
00:47:51,940 --> 00:47:54,820
This one is just the
area of a triangle.

756
00:47:54,820 --> 00:47:56,890
If I factor out the 2 pi e.

757
00:47:56,890 --> 00:48:03,230
And then the other piece is
the integral of 2 pi x e^x dx.

758
00:48:03,230 --> 00:48:08,610
From 0 to 1.

759
00:48:08,610 --> 00:48:12,480
STUDENT: [INAUDIBLE] PROFESSOR:
Are you asking me whether I

760
00:48:12,480 --> 00:48:14,370
need an x^2 here?

761
00:48:14,370 --> 00:48:15,960
I just evaluated the integral.

762
00:48:15,960 --> 00:48:17,290
I just did it geometrically.

763
00:48:17,290 --> 00:48:19,570
I said, this is the
area of a triangle.

764
00:48:19,570 --> 00:48:21,850
I didn't antidifferentiate
and evaluate it,

765
00:48:21,850 --> 00:48:23,880
I just told you the number.

766
00:48:23,880 --> 00:48:27,580
Because it's a
definite integral.

767
00:48:27,580 --> 00:48:31,650
So now, this one here, I
can read off from right up

768
00:48:31,650 --> 00:48:33,980
here, above it.

769
00:48:33,980 --> 00:48:37,050
This is G_1.

770
00:48:37,050 --> 00:48:42,060
So this is equal to,
let's check it out here.

771
00:48:42,060 --> 00:48:49,170
So this is pi e, right,
minus 2 pi G_1(x),

772
00:48:49,170 --> 00:48:52,280
evaluated at 0 and 1.

773
00:48:52,280 --> 00:48:54,990
So let's make sure that it's
the same as what we had before.

774
00:48:54,990 --> 00:48:59,860
It's pi e minus 2 pi
times-- here's G_1.

775
00:48:59,860 --> 00:49:03,230
So it's x e^x - e^x.

776
00:49:03,230 --> 00:49:05,720
So at x = 1, that cancels.

777
00:49:05,720 --> 00:49:08,260
But at the bottom end, it's e^0.

778
00:49:08,260 --> 00:49:12,040
So it's -1 here.

779
00:49:12,040 --> 00:49:13,130
Is that right?

780
00:49:13,130 --> 00:49:13,710
Yep.

781
00:49:13,710 --> 00:49:17,060
So it's pi e - 2.

782
00:49:17,060 --> 00:49:21,650
It's the same.

783
00:49:21,650 --> 00:49:22,150
Question.

784
00:49:22,150 --> 00:49:28,030
STUDENT: [INAUDIBLE]

785
00:49:28,030 --> 00:49:33,380
PROFESSOR: From here to
here, is that the question?

786
00:49:33,380 --> 00:49:39,710
STUDENT: [INAUDIBLE]

787
00:49:39,710 --> 00:49:43,730
PROFESSOR: So the step here
is just the distributive law.

788
00:49:43,730 --> 00:49:46,810
This is e 2 pi x,
that's this term.

789
00:49:46,810 --> 00:49:49,550
And the other terms, the
minus sign is outside.

790
00:49:49,550 --> 00:49:51,320
The 2 pi I factored out.

791
00:49:51,320 --> 00:49:56,980
And the x and the e^x stayed
inside the integral sign.

792
00:49:56,980 --> 00:49:59,140
Thank you.

793
00:49:59,140 --> 00:50:01,670
The correction is that
there was a missing minus

794
00:50:01,670 --> 00:50:03,780
sign, last time.

795
00:50:03,780 --> 00:50:13,100
When I integrated from 0 to 1,
x e^x dx, I had a x e^x - e^x.

796
00:50:13,100 --> 00:50:15,090
Evaluated at 0 and 1.

797
00:50:15,090 --> 00:50:18,350
And that's equal to +1.

798
00:50:18,350 --> 00:50:21,580
I was missing this minus sign.

799
00:50:21,580 --> 00:50:30,840
The place where it came in
was in this wineglass example.

800
00:50:30,840 --> 00:50:36,210
We had the integral of
2 pi x (e - e^x) dx.

801
00:50:39,340 --> 00:50:48,900
And that was 2 pi e integral
of x dx, from 0 to 1, -2 pi,

802
00:50:48,900 --> 00:50:52,810
integral from 0
to 1 of x e^x dx.

803
00:50:52,810 --> 00:50:58,400
And then I worked this
out and it was pi e.

804
00:50:58,400 --> 00:51:03,030
And then this one was -2 pi,
and what I wrote down was -1.

805
00:51:03,030 --> 00:51:05,410
But there should have been
an extra minus sign there.

806
00:51:05,410 --> 00:51:08,430
So it's this.

807
00:51:08,430 --> 00:51:11,930
The final answer was
correct, but this minus sign

808
00:51:11,930 --> 00:51:13,590
was missing.

809
00:51:13,590 --> 00:51:16,930
Right there.

810
00:51:16,930 --> 00:51:20,460
So just, right there.