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Evaluate $$\int\frac{x\sin x}{1+\cos^2 x}dx$$

My attempt:

$$I=\int\frac{x\sin x}{1+\cos^2 x}dx=\int x\frac{\sin x}{1+\cos^2 x}dx=\\x\int \frac{\sin x}{1+\cos^2 x}dx-\int \left[\frac{d}{dx}x\int\frac{\sin x}{1+\cos^2 x}dx\right]dx$$


$I'=\displaystyle \int \frac{\sin x}{1+\cos^2 x}dx$

Let $u=\cos x$

$\therefore \dfrac{du}{dx}=-\sin x$

$\implies du=(-\sin x)dx$

$\therefore \displaystyle I'=-\int \frac{du}{1+u^2} $

$\implies I'=-\dfrac{1}{1}\tan^{-1}\left(\dfrac{u}{1}\right)+C \implies I'=-\tan^{-1}(u)+C$

$\implies I'=-\tan^{-1}(\cos x)+C$

$\therefore \displaystyle \int \frac{\sin x}{1+\cos^2 x}dx=-\tan^{-1} (\cos x)+C$


$\therefore \displaystyle I=x\cdot[-\tan^{-1} (\cos x)]-\int [-\tan^{-1} (\cos x)] dx$

$\implies \displaystyle I=-x \tan^{-1} (\cos x)+\int \tan^{-1} (\cos x)dx$

I cannot understand how to proceed further. Please help.

Lorenzo B.
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MrAP
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    https://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=(xsinx)%2F(1%2Bcos%5E2x)

    Apparently, it's an extremely complex integral... where did you get it from? Any chance of typo?

    – Karn Watcharasupat Apr 14 '18 at 14:57
  • Would you like to see the result? – Dr. Sonnhard Graubner Apr 14 '18 at 15:01
  • @KarnWatcharasupat, I was trying to do $\int^{\pi}_0 \frac{x \sin x}{1+\cos^2 x}dx$ but without limits. – MrAP Apr 14 '18 at 15:02
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    @MrAP it is usually a good idea to keep limits in if you are given them - some integrals simplify considerably with them. – John Doe Apr 14 '18 at 15:06
  • @JohnDoe, First i tried to evaluate the definite integral by trying to evaluate the indefinite integral first. When i was unable to do so, i used the properties of definite integrals and was able to evaluate it. Then i wondered how to integrate the indefinite integral and hence this question. – MrAP Apr 14 '18 at 15:10
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    @MrAP: usually it is not a slick idea to remove the integration bounds and try to tackle a more difficult problem. Many integrals simplify by simmetry because the integration bounds are peculiar. – Jack D'Aurizio Apr 14 '18 at 15:20

3 Answers3

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I doubt you will be able to evaluate the integral without limits, since this link shows that the integral is very complicated, and has polylogarithms.

With the limits given and using your progress so far, $$\begin{align}\int_0^\pi\frac{x\sin x}{1+\cos^2 x}\,dx&=\left[-x\tan^{-1}(\cos x)\right]_0^\pi+\int_0^\pi\tan^{-1}(\cos x)\,dx\\&=\frac{\pi^2}4-\int_{-\pi/2}^{\pi/2}\tan^{-1}(\sin x)\,dx\end{align}$$The second term is an integral of an odd function on a symmetric interval about $0$. So it is zero. Therefore the answer is $\frac{\pi^2}4$.

John Doe
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I wrote this in response to the comment by the OP that he/she actually was trying to solve the definite integral over $[0, \pi]$.

Using the fact that

$$\int_{a}^{b} f(x) dx = \int_{a}^{b} f(b + a - x) dx$$

we find

\begin{align} I &= \int_{0}^{\pi} \frac{x \sin x}{1 + \cos^{2}x} dx \\ &= \int_{0}^{\pi} \frac{(\pi - x) \sin(\pi - x)}{1 + \cos^{2}(\pi - x)} dx \\ &= \int_{0}^{\pi} \frac{(\pi - x) \sin x}{1 + \cos^{2}x} dx \\ &= \pi \int_{0}^{\pi} \frac{\sin x}{1 + \cos^{2} x} dx - I \\ \implies I &= \frac{\pi}{2} \int_{0}^{\pi} \frac{\sin x}{1 + \cos^{2}x} dx \qquad \text{(use substitution $u = \cos(x)$ to evaluate)} \\ &= \frac{\pi}{2} \cdot \frac{\pi}{2} \\ &= \frac{\pi^{2}}{4} \end{align}

Matthew Cassell
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Lol, I thought I found a interesting and funny way to do it, because the YouTube people are taking a detour for some reason, but here it is a more detailed step by step solution compared to those given above

Evaluate:

$$ \int_0^\pi \frac{x \sin x}{1 + \cos^2 x} \, dx $$

Let $$ a = x, \quad a' = 1, \quad b' = \frac{\sin x}{1 + \cos^2 x}, \quad b = -\arctan(\cos x) $$

Then, $$ = \left[ x \arctan(\cos x) \right]_0^\pi + \int_0^\pi \arctan(\cos x) \, dx $$

For: $$ = \left[ x \arctan(\cos x) \right]_0^\pi $$

$$ = -\pi \arctan(-1) + 0 \cdot \arctan(\cos 0) $$

$$ = -\pi \left( -\frac{\pi}{4} \right) $$

$$ = \frac{\pi^2}{4} $$

For:

$$ \int_0^\pi \arctan(\cos x) \, dx $$

Since: (Cosine is recurrent, and absolute value of the area is the same from 0 to pi/2 and from pi/2 to pi): $$ \int_0^{\pi/2} \arctan(\cos x) \, dx = -\int_{\pi/2}^{\pi} \arctan(\cos x) \, dx $$

Therefore: $$ \left[ \arctan(\cos x) \right]_{0}^{\pi} = 0 $$

Therefore, $$ \int_0^\pi \frac{x \sin x}{1 + \cos^2 x} \, dx = \frac{\pi^2}{4}, \quad \boxed{\text{Q.E.D.}} $$