Physicist3
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Homework Statement
The problem that we have been given is to integrate the following: ∫( \frac{4}{2x-1} )dx
Homework Equations
I understand that the when \frac{a}{ax+b} is integrated, the result is ln(ax+b) + C.
The Attempt at a Solution
I have been told I need to make the numerator the same as the integer infront of the x term of the denominator (2) so that the equation meets the format to be \frac{a}{ax+b}, where a = 2 and b = -1. My lecturer informed me that I should change the 4 of the numerator from 4 to 2 and then place a 2 infront of the integral so that it looks like the following:
2∫(\frac{2}{2x-1}).
What I can't understand is why the (2x-1) term doesn't now become (x-0.5) if the 2 at the front of the integral means that the statement will be multiplied by 2, as the top is essentially multiplied by 2 but not the bottom. I may have missed something completely obvious here but this is bugging me slightly.
Thanks