Mister Exam

Integral of cosx^2dx dx

Limits of integration:

from to
v

The graph:

from to

Piecewise:

The solution

You have entered [src]
  1             
  /             
 |              
 |     2        
 |  cos (x)*1 dx
 |              
/               
0               
$$\int\limits_{0}^{1} \cos^{2}{\left(x \right)} 1\, dx$$
Detail solution
  1. Rewrite the integrand:

  2. Integrate term-by-term:

    1. The integral of a constant times a function is the constant times the integral of the function:

      1. Let .

        Then let and substitute :

        1. The integral of a constant times a function is the constant times the integral of the function:

          1. The integral of cosine is sine:

          So, the result is:

        Now substitute back in:

      So, the result is:

    1. The integral of a constant is the constant times the variable of integration:

    The result is:

  3. Add the constant of integration:


The answer is:

The answer (Indefinite) [src]
  /                               
 |                                
 |    2               x   sin(2*x)
 | cos (x)*1 dx = C + - + --------
 |                    2      4    
/                                 
$${{{{\sin \left(2\,x\right)}\over{2}}+x}\over{2}}$$
The graph
The answer [src]
1   cos(1)*sin(1)
- + -------------
2         2      
$${{\sin 2+2}\over{4}}$$
=
=
1   cos(1)*sin(1)
- + -------------
2         2      
$$\frac{\sin{\left(1 \right)} \cos{\left(1 \right)}}{2} + \frac{1}{2}$$
Numerical answer [src]
0.72732435670642
0.72732435670642
The graph
Integral of cosx^2dx dx

    Use the examples entering the upper and lower limits of integration.