REDUCTION FORMULAS
39
In particular we obtain on setting m = 0
(4)
/ sin” -1 * COS X , n — 1 Г . „
sin" x dx —I I sin"
n ' n J
2 x dx.
Thus for n = 2, 4 we have :
J sin 2 ж dx = — 1 sin x cos ф + 1 x ;
sin 4 *d* = — £sin 3 * cos x -f f^ sin 2 *d*
= — ^ sin 3 x cos x — f sin x cos x + | x,
and by setting n = 6 the student can now verify the result of Ex. 5
in Chap. IX, § 8, of the Introduction to the Calculus.
We must warn the student, however, against the stupidity of
applying any of these reduction formulas when there is an obvious
short cut. Thus
I
sin 3 xdx— —
cos 2 x) d cos x = — cos x + ^ cos 3 x,
and to use Formula (4), n = 3, to evaluate this integral would be
much like multiplying 700 and 800 together by logarithms.
If n is negative, we wish to increase it, and so Formulas (3) and
(4) should be used backwards, i.e. solved for the integral on the
right-hand side. A neater form for the result is obtained by going
back to (2) and setting
v — 1 = — n,
¡x — 1 = m :
( 5 )
cos m xdx
sin”*
COS m+1 X
(n — 1) sin” -1 *
+
n — m
n —
cos’” x dx
sin” -2 x
On setting m = 0, we have :
(6)
dx cos* n — 2 dx
sin"* (n —1)sin" -1 * n — lj sin” -2 *
If in (5) ft and m are equal, there is a simpler formula.
Here,
(0S x = cot"* = cot" -2 *(esc 2 * — 1).
sin"*
Hence
(7) j cot" xdx = — ^—y ~ J* cot" -2 * dx.
In all these formulas, n and m may be fractional or incommen
surable. But in that case the given integral cannot in general be