
Setting

, you have

. Then the integral becomes




Now,

in general. But since we want our substitution

to be invertible, we are tacitly assuming that we're working over a restricted domain. In particular, this means

, which implies that

, or equivalently that

. Over this domain,

, so

.
Long story short, this allows us to go from

to


Computing the remaining integral isn't difficult. Expand the numerator with the Pythagorean identity to get

Then integrate term-by-term to get


Now undo the substitution to get the antiderivative back in terms of

.

and using basic trigonometric properties (e.g. Pythagorean theorem) this reduces to
Answer:
He can buy <u>3 bracelets</u>.
Step-by-step explanation:
Given:
Mr. Gonzales has only 42.50 to spend he wants to buy 29 t shirts including tax and some bracelets that cost 4.50 each including tax.
Now, to find the number of bracelets he can buy.
Let the number of bracelets he can buy be 
Price of each bracelets = 4.50.
Total amount to spend = 42.50.
Number of t-shirts = 29.
Now, to get the number of bracelets we put an equation:

<em>Subtracting both sides by 29 we get:</em>
<em />
<em />
<em>Dividing both sides by 4.50 we get:</em>

<u>The number of bracelets = 3.</u>
Therefore, he can buy 3 bracelets.
Answer:
1/27
Step-by-step explanation:
27^(b/3)/9^(a/2) = (27^(1/3))^b/(9^(1/2))^a = (3^b)/(3^a) = 3^(b-a)
= 3^(-(a-b)) = 3^-3 = 1/3^3 = 1/27