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You need to determine where the poles occur at.I wish to evalute integral from 0 to 2pi of $\frac{1}{13+12cost}$ using compex analysis. So I say $cosz=0.5(z+z{-1})$ and change variables thus integrand becomes:
$-i\frac{1}{13z+6z^2+6}$. What do I do from here?
There is no change of variable involved, you are using an identity.I wish to evalute integral from 0 to 2pi of $\frac{1}{13+12cost}$ using compex analysis. So I say $cosz=0.5(z+z^{-1})$ and change variables thus integrand becomes:
$-i\frac{1}{13z+6z^2+6}$. What do I do from here?
Is...... there is no change of variable involved, you are using an identity... where did the -i come from?...
What is being used is:Is...
$\displaystyle z=e^{i\ t} \implies dz=i\ e^{i t}\ dt= i\ z\ dt \implies dt=\frac{d z}{i\ z}=-i\ \frac{d z}{z}$
Kind regards
$\chi$ $\sigma$
Of course the correct solving procedure is to set $\displaystyle \cos t = \frac{z+z^{-1}}{2},\ z=e^{i\ t}$ , that conducts to the identity...What is being used is:
\(\cos(z)=\frac{e^{iz}+e^{-iz}}{2}\)
so:
\(\cos(t)=\frac{e^{it}+e^{-it}}{2}\)
just relabelling of the dummy variable of integration.
CB
Yes, I should have notice4d where it had come from straight off.Of course the correct solving procedure is to set $\displaystyle \cos t = \frac{z+z^{-1}}{2},\ z=e^{i\ t}$ , that conducts to the identity...
$\displaystyle \int_{0}^{2 \pi} \frac{dt}{13+12\ \cos t}= -i\ \int_{C} \frac {d z}{6 z^{2}+13 z+6}$ (1)
... where C is the unit circle. The purpose of my post was to justify the 'funny term' -i in the formula...
Kind regards
$\chi$ $\sigma$