Evaluating indefinite integral with any hint or solution












2














How can I evaluate this indefinite integral.



$$
intfrac{dx}{xsqrt{x^3+x+1}}
$$



any hit would be appreciated.










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  • 1




    It does seem to have a nice looking closed-form. Where is this from?
    – mrtaurho
    Nov 26 at 17:38








  • 2




    Some sort of elliptic integral?
    – Richard Martin
    Nov 26 at 17:39
















2














How can I evaluate this indefinite integral.



$$
intfrac{dx}{xsqrt{x^3+x+1}}
$$



any hit would be appreciated.










share|cite|improve this question


















  • 1




    It does seem to have a nice looking closed-form. Where is this from?
    – mrtaurho
    Nov 26 at 17:38








  • 2




    Some sort of elliptic integral?
    – Richard Martin
    Nov 26 at 17:39














2












2








2


1





How can I evaluate this indefinite integral.



$$
intfrac{dx}{xsqrt{x^3+x+1}}
$$



any hit would be appreciated.










share|cite|improve this question













How can I evaluate this indefinite integral.



$$
intfrac{dx}{xsqrt{x^3+x+1}}
$$



any hit would be appreciated.







integration indefinite-integrals






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share|cite|improve this question











share|cite|improve this question




share|cite|improve this question










asked Nov 26 at 17:36









Amin Qassemi

164




164








  • 1




    It does seem to have a nice looking closed-form. Where is this from?
    – mrtaurho
    Nov 26 at 17:38








  • 2




    Some sort of elliptic integral?
    – Richard Martin
    Nov 26 at 17:39














  • 1




    It does seem to have a nice looking closed-form. Where is this from?
    – mrtaurho
    Nov 26 at 17:38








  • 2




    Some sort of elliptic integral?
    – Richard Martin
    Nov 26 at 17:39








1




1




It does seem to have a nice looking closed-form. Where is this from?
– mrtaurho
Nov 26 at 17:38






It does seem to have a nice looking closed-form. Where is this from?
– mrtaurho
Nov 26 at 17:38






2




2




Some sort of elliptic integral?
– Richard Martin
Nov 26 at 17:39




Some sort of elliptic integral?
– Richard Martin
Nov 26 at 17:39










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















2














This "reduces" to an incomplete elliptic integral.
Somewhat more generally,



$$ int dfrac{dx}{x sqrt{(x-a)(x-b)(x-c)}} = {frac {pm 2,i}{a sqrt {a-c}}{it EllipticPi} left( {frac {sqrt {a-x}}{sqrt {a-b}}},{frac {a-b}{a}},{frac {sqrt {a-b}}{sqrt {a-c}}}
right) }$$



(using Maple's notation). In your case you want to take $a,b,c$ to be the three roots of $x^3+x+1$ (one real root approximately $-0.682327803828019$, two complex roots approximately $0.341163901914009693 pm 1.16154139999725192,i$).






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    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

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    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

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    active

    oldest

    votes









    2














    This "reduces" to an incomplete elliptic integral.
    Somewhat more generally,



    $$ int dfrac{dx}{x sqrt{(x-a)(x-b)(x-c)}} = {frac {pm 2,i}{a sqrt {a-c}}{it EllipticPi} left( {frac {sqrt {a-x}}{sqrt {a-b}}},{frac {a-b}{a}},{frac {sqrt {a-b}}{sqrt {a-c}}}
    right) }$$



    (using Maple's notation). In your case you want to take $a,b,c$ to be the three roots of $x^3+x+1$ (one real root approximately $-0.682327803828019$, two complex roots approximately $0.341163901914009693 pm 1.16154139999725192,i$).






    share|cite|improve this answer




























      2














      This "reduces" to an incomplete elliptic integral.
      Somewhat more generally,



      $$ int dfrac{dx}{x sqrt{(x-a)(x-b)(x-c)}} = {frac {pm 2,i}{a sqrt {a-c}}{it EllipticPi} left( {frac {sqrt {a-x}}{sqrt {a-b}}},{frac {a-b}{a}},{frac {sqrt {a-b}}{sqrt {a-c}}}
      right) }$$



      (using Maple's notation). In your case you want to take $a,b,c$ to be the three roots of $x^3+x+1$ (one real root approximately $-0.682327803828019$, two complex roots approximately $0.341163901914009693 pm 1.16154139999725192,i$).






      share|cite|improve this answer


























        2












        2








        2






        This "reduces" to an incomplete elliptic integral.
        Somewhat more generally,



        $$ int dfrac{dx}{x sqrt{(x-a)(x-b)(x-c)}} = {frac {pm 2,i}{a sqrt {a-c}}{it EllipticPi} left( {frac {sqrt {a-x}}{sqrt {a-b}}},{frac {a-b}{a}},{frac {sqrt {a-b}}{sqrt {a-c}}}
        right) }$$



        (using Maple's notation). In your case you want to take $a,b,c$ to be the three roots of $x^3+x+1$ (one real root approximately $-0.682327803828019$, two complex roots approximately $0.341163901914009693 pm 1.16154139999725192,i$).






        share|cite|improve this answer














        This "reduces" to an incomplete elliptic integral.
        Somewhat more generally,



        $$ int dfrac{dx}{x sqrt{(x-a)(x-b)(x-c)}} = {frac {pm 2,i}{a sqrt {a-c}}{it EllipticPi} left( {frac {sqrt {a-x}}{sqrt {a-b}}},{frac {a-b}{a}},{frac {sqrt {a-b}}{sqrt {a-c}}}
        right) }$$



        (using Maple's notation). In your case you want to take $a,b,c$ to be the three roots of $x^3+x+1$ (one real root approximately $-0.682327803828019$, two complex roots approximately $0.341163901914009693 pm 1.16154139999725192,i$).







        share|cite|improve this answer














        share|cite|improve this answer



        share|cite|improve this answer








        edited Nov 26 at 18:02

























        answered Nov 26 at 17:56









        Robert Israel

        318k23207458




        318k23207458






























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