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[parent] arc length of logarithmic curve (Example)

The arc length of the graph of logarithm function is expressible in closed form (other cases are listed in the entry arc length of parabola). The usual arc length formula $$s \;=\; \int_a^b\!\sqrt{1+(f'(x))^2}\,dx$$ gives, if $0 < a < b$ , for $f(x) := \ln{x}$ , $f'(x) = \frac{1}{x}$ , the expression

$\displaystyle s \;=\; \int_a^b\!\frac{\sqrt{1\!+\!x^2}}{x}\,dx.$ (1)

Here, finding a suitable substitution for integration may be a bit difficult. E.g. $x := \tan{t}$ leads to $$\int\!\frac{\sqrt{1\!+\!x^2}}{x}\,dx \;=\; \int\frac{dt}{\sin{t}\,\cos^2{t}},$$ the substitution $x := \sinh{t}$ to $$\int\!\frac{\sqrt{1\!+\!x^2}}{x}\,dx \;=\; \int\frac{\cosh^2{t}}{\sinh{t}}\,dt,$$ which both seem to require a new substitution. As well the Euler's substitutions (1st and 2nd ones) lead to awkward rational functions as integrands.

But there is the straightforward simple substitution $$\sqrt{1\!+\!x^2} \;:=\; t, \quad x \;=\; \sqrt{t^2\!-\!1}, \quad dx \;=\; \frac{t\,dt}{\sqrt{t^2\!-\!1}}$$ yielding $$\int\!\frac{\sqrt{1\!+\!x^2}}{x}\,dx \;=\; \int\!\frac{t^2\,dt}{t^2\!-\!1} \;=\; t+\frac{1}{2}\ln\frac{t\!-\!1}{t\!+\!1}+C \;=\; t-\arcoth{t}+C$$ (see area functions) and then $$\int\!\frac{\sqrt{1\!+\!x^2}}{x}\,dx \;=\; \sqrt{1\!+\!x^2}+\frac{1}{2}\ln\frac{\sqrt{1\!+\!x^2}-1}{\sqrt{1\!+\!x^2}+1}+C \;=\; \sqrt{1\!+\!x^2}+\ln\frac{x}{1+\sqrt{1\!+\!x^2}}+C.$$ Using this antiderivative, one can obtain the arc length (1). For example, if $a = \sqrt{3}$ and $b = \sqrt{15}$ , the result is $s = 2+\ln\frac{3}{\sqrt{5}}$ .

As for finding the arc length of the graph of the exponential function $x \mapsto e^x$ , which actually is the same curve as the graph of the inverse function $x \mapsto \ln{x}$ , one may write the expression

$\displaystyle s \;=\; \int_\alpha^\beta\!\sqrt{1\!+\!e^{2x}}\,dx.$ (2)

Since here the substitution $$e^x \;:=\; t, \quad x \;=\; \ln{t}, \quad dx \;=\; \frac{dt}{t}$$ shows that $$\int\!\sqrt{1\!+\!e^{2x}}\,dx \;=\; \int\!\frac{\sqrt{1\!+\!t^2}}{t}\,dt,$$ we see that it's really a question of the same task as above. The antiderivative is $$\int\!\sqrt{1\!+\!e^{2x}}\,dx \;=\; \sqrt{1\!+\!e^{2x}}-\arsinh{e^{-x}}+C \;=\; \sqrt{1\!+\!e^{2x}}+\ln\frac{e^x}{1+\sqrt{1\!+\!e^{2x}}}+C.$$




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Other names:  arc length of exponential curve

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Cross-references: inverse function, curve, antiderivative, area functions, integrands, rational functions, Euler's substitutions, substitution for integration, expression, arc length of parabola, expressible in closed form, graph, arc length

This is version 8 of arc length of logarithmic curve, born on 2009-09-06, modified 2009-09-13.
Object id is 11901, canonical name is ArcLengthOfLogarithmicCurve.
Accessed 612 times total.

Classification:
AMS MSC26A06 (Real functions :: Functions of one variable :: One-variable calculus)
 26A09 (Real functions :: Functions of one variable :: Elementary functions)
 26A42 (Real functions :: Functions of one variable :: Integrals of Riemann, Stieltjes and Lebesgue type)
 53A04 (Differential geometry :: Classical differential geometry :: Curves in Euclidean space)

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