f(x)=∫0x3 t3dt
Integral of 0 to x^3 t^3 dt
What I know tells me to do this:
Let u=x^3
du=3x^2dx
Divide by 3x^2 on both sides
(1/3x^2)du=dx
Going back to f(x), I replace 't' with 'u' and multiply by the derivative of 'u' due to the Chain Rule.
(u^3)1/3x^2
Now I substitute 'u' with x^3 and get:
(x^9)/(3x^2)
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I submit my homework electronically, and it tells me if the answer is correct or not. Obviously it's telling me that's not the right answer. Looking at Wolfram Alpha, I find (x^12)/4 but that isn't the answer either.
Help?
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UPDATE: Well, this thread was useless. Just realized my mistake. Although I guess the question is now, why is it that you don't go all the way with the chain rule this time, because I don't get that.