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Possible Duplicate:
Computing $ \int_a^b \frac{x^p}{\sqrt{(x-a)(b-x)}} \mathrm dx$

How would you compute $\int_{\alpha}^{\beta} \frac{x}{\sqrt{(x-\alpha)(\beta-x)}} \ dx\space?$

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    @Norbert: it can happen that some particular cases allow particular solutions that do not apply to the general case. I'm not convinced that it's a good idea to close such problems based on the fact that there is a general case already discussed. (just saying my opinion)2012-11-28

2 Answers 2

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Make a change of variables $y= \alpha+\beta - x$. $ \mathcal{I}_{\alpha,\beta} := \int_\alpha^\beta \frac{x}{\sqrt{(x-\alpha)(\beta-x)}} \mathrm{d}x = \int_{\alpha}^\beta \frac{\alpha+\beta - y}{\sqrt{(\beta-y)(y-\alpha)}} \mathrm{d}y $ Implying $ \frac{2}{\alpha+\beta} \mathcal{I}_{\alpha,\beta} = \int_\alpha^\beta \frac{\mathrm{d}x}{\sqrt{(x-\alpha)(\beta-x)}} $ Now standardize: $x = \alpha + (\beta-\alpha) u$: $ \frac{2}{\alpha+\beta} \mathcal{I}_{\alpha,\beta} = \int_0^1 \frac{\mathrm{d} u}{\sqrt{u(1-u)}} $ Giving: $ \mathcal{I}_{\alpha,\beta} = \frac{\alpha+\beta}{2} \int_0^1 \frac{\mathrm{d} u}{\sqrt{u(1-u)}} = \frac{\alpha+\beta}{2} \left. 2 \arcsin(\sqrt{u}) \right|_{u=0}^{u=1} = \pi \frac{\alpha+\beta}{2} $

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    Beautiful! (+1)2012-11-28
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Let $I(a,b) = \int_a^b \dfrac{x}{\sqrt{(x-a)(b-x)}} dx$ $I(-b,b) = \int_{-b}^b \dfrac{x}{\sqrt{(x+b)(b-x)}} dx = 0 \,\,\,\,\,\,\,(\text{Odd function})$ Hence, $I(a,b) = f(a+b)$ Hence, $f(z) = I(0,z) = \int_0^z \dfrac{\sqrt{x}}{\sqrt{z-x}} dx$ Now $x = z-t^2 \implies dx = -2t dt$. Hence, $f(z) = I(0,z) = \int_0^z \dfrac{\sqrt{x}}{\sqrt{z-x}} dx = \int_{\sqrt{z}}^{0} \dfrac{\sqrt{z-t^2}}{t}(-2t dt) = 2\int_0^{\sqrt{z}} \sqrt{z-t^2} dt = 2 \dfrac{\pi z}4 = \dfrac{\pi z}2$ Hence, $I(a,b) = f(a+b) = \dfrac{\pi(a+b)}2$

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    @anon Yes. What you have written is true. I will update it accordingly.2012-11-29