Lesson 157: U-Substitution: The Chain Rule in Reverse

Simplifying Integrals

U-Substitution is the tool we use to integrate nested functions. It undoes the Chain Rule. We pick a part of the function to be \(u\), find \(du\), and rewrite the entire integral in terms of \(u\).

Worked Examples

Example 1: Basic Substitution

Evaluate \(\int 2x \cos(x^2) dx\).

Example 2: With Limits

Evaluate \(\int_0^1 (2x+1)^3 dx\).

The Bridge to Quantum Mechanics

In Quantum Mechanics, we often use substitution to solve for Wavepackets. A wavepacket is a sum of many different frequencies. By substituting coordinates (like moving from \(x\) to a "shifted" coordinate \(x - vt\)), we can see how the packet moves through space. This "change of variables" is the mathematical equivalent of moving into a frame of reference that travels along with the particle.