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$ \int\ \frac {dx} {x^4 - c^4} \\ $

is equal to (from integral tables)

$ \frac {1} {4 c^3} \ln \frac {x-c} {x+c} - \frac {1} {2 c^3} \tan^{-1}\frac {x} {c}$

If I let $\frac{x}{c}=\tan u$, then $dx/c= \sec^2 u du$, and the integral becomes $ \frac {1} {c^3} \int\ \frac {\sec ^2u du} {\tan^4u -1} = \frac {1} {c^3} \int\ \frac {\sec ^2u du} {(\tan^2u +1)(\tan^2u -1)} $ Since $\tan^2u+1=\sec^2u$ the integral becomes $ \frac {1} {c^3} \int\ \frac {du} {(\tan^2u -1)} $

Am I on the right track? What should I do next?

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    Thank you very much for your hint!!2012-02-08

1 Answers 1

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You’d be better off writing factoring $x^4-c^4$ as $(x^2-c^2)(x^2+c^2)$ and then as $(x-c)(x+c)(x^2+c^2)$ and decomposing $\frac1{x^4-c^4}$ into partial fractions:

$\frac1{x^4-c^4}=\frac{A}{x-c}+\frac{B}{x+c}+\frac{Cx+D}{x^2+c^2}\;.$

Once you’ve done the algebra to find $A,B$, and $C$, the integrations should be pretty straightforward: two logs and a tangent substitution.

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    There is a hazard of looking up the "answer" first, then trying to get it.2012-02-08