QUESTION IMAGE
Question
evaluate the integral using trigonometric substitution.
int \frac{1}{y^{2}sqrt{15 - y^{2}}}dy
(use symbolic notation and fractions where needed. use ( c ) for the arbitrary constant. absorb into ( c ) as needed.)
int \frac{1}{y^{2}sqrt{15 - y^{2}}}dy = i
Step1: Set up the substitution
Let $y = \sqrt{15}\sin\theta$, then $dy=\sqrt{15}\cos\theta d\theta$. And $\sqrt{15 - y^{2}}=\sqrt{15 - 15\sin^{2}\theta}=\sqrt{15}\cos\theta$, $y^{2}=15\sin^{2}\theta$.
Step2: Substitute into the integral
Substituting these into the integral $\int\frac{1}{y^{2}\sqrt{15 - y^{2}}}dy$, we get:
\[
\]
Step3: Integrate
We know that $\int\csc^{2}\theta d\theta=-\cot\theta + C$.
Since $y = \sqrt{15}\sin\theta$, then $\sin\theta=\frac{y}{\sqrt{15}}$, and using the right - triangle relationship $\cot\theta=\frac{\sqrt{15 - y^{2}}}{y}$.
Step4: Back - substitute
So $\frac{1}{15}\int\csc^{2}\theta d\theta=-\frac{1}{15}\cdot\frac{\sqrt{15 - y^{2}}}{y}+C$.
Snap & solve any problem in the app
Get step-by-step solutions on Sovi AI
Photo-based solutions with guided steps
Explore more problems and detailed explanations
$-\frac{\sqrt{15 - y^{2}}}{15y}+C$