Improper integrals with infinite discontinuities

nweis84
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Homework Statement



\int\frac{13}{(x-8)^2}dx

Homework Equations



it is integrated from 7 to 9 and i am aware that there is an infinite discontinuity at x=8 so we have to take the limit from both sides individually.


The Attempt at a Solution



The only thing I can think that I might be doing wrong is just integrating it wrong but it seems like such an easy integration. The integration that I come up with:

-\frac{13}{x-8}


as a goes to 8 [\frac{-13}{a-8}+\frac{13}{7-8}]+[\frac{-13}{9-8}+\frac{13}{a-8}]

and this comes out to be -26 which has to be wrong because the graph is above the positive x-axis and also it is not one of my answer choices.
 
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nweis84 said:
as a goes to 8 [\frac{-13}{a-8}+\frac{13}{7-8}]+[\frac{-13}{9-8}+\frac{13}{a-8}]
I thought you said you were going to take the limit of both sides individually? This looks more like you threw both sides together first, and then took a limit.
 
I'm not really sure how to write it in there with this program but I did take the limits individually when I did the work on my paper. The first bracket is the limit from 7 to a as a approaches 8 from the left and the second bracket is the limit from a to 9 as a approaches 8 from the right. Did i do that right?
 
then don't you just add them in the end?
 
What were the limits on the two sides then? What two numbers did you add together to get -26?
 
both of them came out to -13
 
Interesting. Could you show how you calculated that?
 
lim as a --> 8- [ \frac{-13}{x-8} ]

from 7 to a =

[\frac{-13}{(a-8)}+\frac{13}{(7-8)}]

[ 0 + \frac{13}{-1}]

= -13
 
its the same basically for the other side
 
  • #10
nweis84 said:
[ 0 + \frac{13}{-1}]
The 13/-1 makes sense. How did you get that 0?
 
  • #11
well doesn't the 8- with the negative sign to the right of the number mean +8 but that it is approaching from the left side?
or are you saying that it means I should have plugged in a negative 8 for a?

or does that mean that that factor goes to infinity?
 
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  • #12
nweis84 said:
or does that mean that that factor goes to infinity?
Bingo. (+\infty, I believe? You should check)
 
  • #13
thanks for your help It's just been a while since calc I and i kinda forgot how to do limits

and yes one of the answer choices is that the integral diverges
 
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