Thursday, September 28, 2017

integration - A direct proof for intx0fracxln(1u2)usqrtx2u2,mathrmdu=arcsin2(x)


I have been trying to evaluate f(x)0ln(1x2cosh2(t))dt

for x[0,1] and similar integrals recently. I know that 0dtcoshz(t)=2z2Γ2(z2)Γ(z)
holds for Re(z)>0, so by expanding the logarithm I found that f(x)=12n=1(2n)!!n2(2n1)!!x2n.
But the right-hand side is the power series of the arcsine squared, so f(x)=arcsin2(x).


On the other hand, the substitution u=xcosh(t) in the original integral leads to the representation f(x)=x0xln(1u2)ux2u2du,

for which Mathematica (or WolframAlpha if you're lucky) gives the correct result.


I would like to compute this integral without resorting to the above power series and thereby find an alternative proof for the expansion. I have tried to transform the integral into the usual form arcsin2(x)=x02arcsin(y)1y2du

and thought about using the relations arcsin(x)=arctan(x1x2)=2arctan(x1+1x2),
but to no avail. Maybe the solution is trivial and I just cannot see it at the moment, maybe it is not. Anyway, I would be grateful for any ideas or hints.


Answer



I have finally managed to put all the pieces together, so here's a solution that does not use the power series:


Let u=xv to obtain f(x)=10ln(1x2v2)v1v2dv.

Now we can differentiate under the integral sign (justified by the dominated convergence theorem) and use the substitution v=1w2. Then the derivative is given by f(x)=2x10v(1x2v2)1v2dv=2x10dw1x2+x2w2=21x2arctan(x1x2)=2arcsin(x)1x2
for x(0,1). Since f(0)=0, integration yields f(x)=f(0)+x02arcsin(y)1y2dy=arcsin2(x)
for x[0,1] as claimed.


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