- Apr 14, 2002
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My physics teacher gave us an integration to examine, so we could use it to find the electric field of a line of charge. The anti-derivative he wants us to find is this. He already told us the answer is this.
I already tried applying everything I know, and can't get anywhere. Whether it's we didn't learn it in my calculus class yet, or I just can't figure it out remains to be seen. I tried doing a u substitution, which comes to a dead end. So then I tried integration by parts. I tried to let u and dv equal various things, but it just seems to make it more and more complicated. Just for your information, the last topic we did was integration by parts in my calculus class, so if you think the technique to solve it is past what we did, could you still post it so I can examine it? Thanks in advance.
I already tried applying everything I know, and can't get anywhere. Whether it's we didn't learn it in my calculus class yet, or I just can't figure it out remains to be seen. I tried doing a u substitution, which comes to a dead end. So then I tried integration by parts. I tried to let u and dv equal various things, but it just seems to make it more and more complicated. Just for your information, the last topic we did was integration by parts in my calculus class, so if you think the technique to solve it is past what we did, could you still post it so I can examine it? Thanks in advance.
