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9.1 Determine the following integrals: 9.1.1 \( \int \frac{6}{x} \; dx \) 9.1.2 \( \int (x-1)^{2} \; dx \) 9.2 The sketch below represents the bounded area of the curve defined by \( f(x) = x^{2} + 3 \) Determine the shaded area bounded by the curve and the \( x \)-axis between the points where \( x = -2 \) and \( x = 1 \). - NSC Technical Mathematics - Question 9 - 2018 - Paper 1

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Question 9

9.1-Determine-the-following-integrals:--9.1.1-\(-\int-\frac{6}{x}-\;-dx-\)--9.1.2-\(-\int-(x-1)^{2}-\;-dx-\)--9.2-The-sketch-below-represents-the-bounded-area-of-the-curve-defined-by-\(-f(x)-=-x^{2}-+-3-\)--Determine-the-shaded-area-bounded-by-the-curve-and-the-\(-x-\)-axis-between-the-points-where-\(-x-=--2-\)-and-\(-x-=-1-\).-NSC Technical Mathematics-Question 9-2018-Paper 1.png

9.1 Determine the following integrals: 9.1.1 \( \int \frac{6}{x} \; dx \) 9.1.2 \( \int (x-1)^{2} \; dx \) 9.2 The sketch below represents the bounded area of the... show full transcript

Worked Solution & Example Answer:9.1 Determine the following integrals: 9.1.1 \( \int \frac{6}{x} \; dx \) 9.1.2 \( \int (x-1)^{2} \; dx \) 9.2 The sketch below represents the bounded area of the curve defined by \( f(x) = x^{2} + 3 \) Determine the shaded area bounded by the curve and the \( x \)-axis between the points where \( x = -2 \) and \( x = 1 \). - NSC Technical Mathematics - Question 9 - 2018 - Paper 1

Step 1

9.1.1 \( \int \frac{6}{x} \; dx \)

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Answer

To solve the integral ( \int \frac{6}{x} ; dx ), we can apply the natural logarithm rule:

axdx=alnx+C\int \frac{a}{x} dx = a \ln |x| + C

Thus,

6x  dx=6lnx+C\int \frac{6}{x} \; dx = 6 \ln |x| + C

Step 2

9.1.2 \( \int (x-1)^{2} \; dx \)

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Answer

First, expand the integrand:

(x1)2=x22x+1(x-1)^{2} = x^{2} - 2x + 1

Now we can integrate term by term:

(x22x+1)  dx=x33x2+x+C\int (x^{2} - 2x + 1) \; dx = \frac{x^{3}}{3} - x^{2} + x + C

Step 3

9.2 Determine the shaded area bounded by the curve and the x-axis between the points where x = -2 and x = 1.

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Answer

To find the area bounded by the curve ( f(x) = x^{2} + 3 ) and the x-axis, we first determine the points where the curve intersects the x-axis:

Set ( f(x) = 0 ):

x2+3=0x2=3x^{2} + 3 = 0 \Rightarrow x^{2} = -3

Since there are no real roots, the curve does not intersect the x-axis. We compute the area from ( x = -2 ) to ( x = 1 ) directly:

Area=21(x2+3)  dx\text{Area} = \int_{-2}^{1} (x^{2} + 3) \; dx

Calculating the integral:

=[x33+3x]21= \left[ \frac{x^{3}}{3} + 3x \right]_{-2}^{1}

Evaluating at the boundaries:

=(133+3×1)((2)33+3×(2))= \left( \frac{1^{3}}{3} + 3 \times 1 \right) - \left( \frac{(-2)^{3}}{3} + 3 \times (-2) \right)

=(13+3)(836)= \left( \frac{1}{3} + 3 \right) - \left( -\frac{8}{3} - 6 \right)

This will yield the total area after proper calculation.

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