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1 Which of the following is not true (the ones that are true can be deduced from integration by parts)?
2 Which of the following correctly describes the relationship between integration by parts and integration by u-substitution when deciding to integrate a pointwise product of functions or a composite of two functions?
3 Which of the following is an incorrect way of applying integration by parts twice?
4 Which of the following integrations can be done without integration by parts, and purely using integration by u-substitution and the knowledge of the antiderivative of the cosine function?
1 Suppose f is a function with a known antiderivative F. Which of the following is correct (and can be deduced using integration by parts)?
2 Suppose f is a function with a known antiderivative F. Which of the following integration problems is not equivalent to the others?
3 In order to find the indefinite integral for a function of the form x↦p(x)sinx, the general strategy, which always works, is to take p(x) as the part to differentiate and sinx as the part to integrate, and keep repeating the process. Which of the following is the best explanation for why this strategy works?
4 Suppose we know the first three antiderivatives for f, i.e., we have explicit expressions for an antiderivative of f, an antiderivative of that antiderivative, and an antiderivative of the antiderivative of the antiderivative. What is the largest nonnegative integer k for which this guarantees us an expression for an antiderivative of x↦xkf(x)?
5 Suppose we know the first three antiderivatives for f, i.e., we have explicit expressions for an antiderivative of f, an antiderivative of that antiderivative, and an antiderivative of the antiderivative of the antiderivative. What is the largest nonnegative integer k for which this guarantees us an expression for an antiderivative of x↦f(x1/k)? For simplicity, assume that we are only considering x>0.