Ok thanks for that
Would you be able to explain something like this to me please?
evaluate: the integral bounded by 3 and 0 t/(t+1)^1/2 dt
not sure if this makes sense....
Yep! Sure thing.
So, we need to first choose something to become our substitution. The more you do, the more confident you'll become with it.
\[ \text{Let: } u = t + 1 \]
Now, going through our checklist, we start with the bounds. So, since we're going from the \( t \) world to the \( u \) world, our new bounds have to be with respect to \( u \).
So, we begin with the lower bound: when \( t = 0, u = 0 + 1 = 1 \)
Upper bound becomes: \( t = 3, u = 3 + 1 = 4 \)
Step 2) Now that we've got our bounds out of the way, let's consider how \( t \) differs to \( u \).
Using our substitution, we see that:
\[ u = t + 1 \]
\[ \frac{dt}{du} = 1 \Rightarrow dt = du \]
Step 3) Lastly, we rearrange for \( t \). From our substitution, we see that:
\[ t = u - 1 \]
So, every element of our integral can be rewritten in terms of \( u \)
^{\frac{1}{2}}}\, dt)
\,du \end{align*})
From here, it's just simple integration.