This article is about a particular function from a subset of the real numbers to the real numbers. Information about the function, including its domain, range, and key data relating to graphing, differentiation, and integration, is presented in the article.
View a complete list of particular functions on this wiki
For functions involving angles (trigonometric functions, inverse trigonometric functions, etc.) we follow the convention that all angles are measured in radians. Thus, for instance, the angle of
is measured as
.
Definition
The function, denoted
, is defined as the composite of the cube function and the secant function (which in turn is the composite of the reciprocal function and the cosine function). Explicitly, it is given as:
Differentiation
First derivative
We can differentiate this function as a composite function, using the chain rule for differentiation. We get:
Alternatively, we could consider it as
, and hence as a composite of
and
. With that interpretation, the chain rule for differentiation yields:
The two answers can be verified to be equivalent.
Integration
First antiderivative
We use the recursive version of integration by parts.
We rewrite
and perform integration by parts, taking
as the part to integrate:
We can choose an antiderivative
of
so that the above holds without any additive constant adjustment, and we get:
We rearrange and obtain:
Dividing by 2, we get:
The general antiderivative expression is thus: