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Direct integration equations

#025

Problem

y=2xcos(x2)y' = 2x\cos(x^2)

Classification

  • trigonometric antiderivative
  • solution family

Method

  • direct integration
  • integration substitution

Solution

y=sin(x2)+Cy = \sin(x^2) + C

Simulation & Code

Computational workSimulation
Graph visualization for entry #025
Download .py file
Python codeOpen
import numpy as np
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

x = np.linspace(-4, 4, 800)

with np.errstate(divide="ignore", invalid="ignore", over="ignore"):
    y = np.sin(x**2)
    y_prime = 2*x*np.cos(x**2)

plt.figure(figsize=(8, 5))
plt.plot(x, y, label="y = sin(x^2)", linewidth=2)
plt.plot(x, y_prime, label="y' = 2xcos(x^2)", linewidth=2, color="red")
plt.title("Entry #025: solution and derivative")
plt.xlabel("x")
plt.ylabel("value")
plt.grid(True, alpha=0.35)
plt.legend()
plt.tight_layout()
plt.show()

Handwritten derivation

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Takeaway & Interpretation

This equation says the solution's slope is controlled entirely by 2xcos(x^2). After integrating, the solution family becomes y = sin(x^2) + C, meaning every solution has the same overall shape but may be shifted vertically by the constant C.