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1 and the positive and negative square roots of 2
Trigonometric functions are periodic - they repeat after a period of pi, or 2 x pi.Trigonometric functions are periodic - they repeat after a period of pi, or 2 x pi.Trigonometric functions are periodic - they repeat after a period of pi, or 2 x pi.Trigonometric functions are periodic - they repeat after a period of pi, or 2 x pi.
what are the 2main kinds of roots
The square roots of 4 are -2 and 2.
The Web site integrals.wolfram.com gives the following:integral of sin2x/x = (1/2) (log x - Ci(2 x))Ci is the cosine integral, a special function. Look at the site for a more detailed description.What this really means is that this integral can NOT be solved with the so-called elementary functions, i.e., using only polynomials, roots, trigonometric functions, natural logarithms, and the inverses of some of these.The Web site integrals.wolfram.com gives the following:integral of sin2x/x = (1/2) (log x - Ci(2 x))Ci is the cosine integral, a special function. Look at the site for a more detailed description.What this really means is that this integral can NOT be solved with the so-called elementary functions, i.e., using only polynomials, roots, trigonometric functions, natural logarithms, and the inverses of some of these.The Web site integrals.wolfram.com gives the following:integral of sin2x/x = (1/2) (log x - Ci(2 x))Ci is the cosine integral, a special function. Look at the site for a more detailed description.What this really means is that this integral can NOT be solved with the so-called elementary functions, i.e., using only polynomials, roots, trigonometric functions, natural logarithms, and the inverses of some of these.The Web site integrals.wolfram.com gives the following:integral of sin2x/x = (1/2) (log x - Ci(2 x))Ci is the cosine integral, a special function. Look at the site for a more detailed description.What this really means is that this integral can NOT be solved with the so-called elementary functions, i.e., using only polynomials, roots, trigonometric functions, natural logarithms, and the inverses of some of these.