Lesson 160: Trigonometric Substitution: Area of a Circle

Dealing with Radicals

When you see expressions like \(\sqrt{a^2 - x^2}\), ordinary U-substitution fails. Instead, we substitute \(x = a \sin \theta\). This uses the Pythagorean identity \(\cos^2 \theta = 1 - \sin^2 \theta\) to "cancel" the square root.

Worked Examples

Example 1: The Area of a Quarter Circle

Evaluate \(\int_0^1 \sqrt{1 - x^2} dx\).

The Bridge to Quantum Mechanics

Trigonometric substitution is used in Semiclassical Quantum Mechanics (the WKB approximation). We often have to integrate expressions like \(\sqrt{E - V(x)}\) to find the "phase" of the wavefunction. If the potential \(V(x)\) is parabolic or circular, this method is the only way to calculate the tunneling probability or the energy levels. It bridges the gap between the geometry of classical orbits and the wave-nature of quantum particles.