Bioche's rules

Bioche's rules, formulated by the French mathematician Charles Bioche [fr] (1859–1949), are rules to aid in the computation of certain indefinite integrals in which the integrand contains sines and cosines.

In the following, is a rational expression in and . In order to calculate , consider the integrand . We consider the behavior of this entire integrand, including the , under translation and reflections of the t axis. The translations and reflections are ones that correspond to the symmetries and periodicities of the basic trigonometric functions.

Bioche's rules state that:

  1. If , a good change of variables is .
  2. If , a good change of variables is .
  3. If , a good change of variables is .
  4. If two of the preceding relations both hold, a good change of variables is .
  5. In all other cases, use .

Because rules 1 and 2 involve flipping the t axis, they flip the sign of dt, and therefore the behavior of ω under these transformations differs from that of ƒ by a sign. Although the rules could be stated in terms of ƒ, stating them in terms of ω has a mnemonic advantage, which is that we choose the change of variables u(t) that has the same symmetry as ω.

These rules can be, in fact, stated as a theorem: one shows[1] that the proposed change of variable reduces (if the rule applies and if f is actually of the form ) to the integration of a rational function in a new variable, which can be calculated by partial fraction decomposition.

  1. ^ Vidiani, L.G. (October 1976). "Règles de Bioche" [Bioche's rules] (PDF). Revue de mathématiques et de sciences physiques (in French): 1–2. Archived from the original on 18 July 2022. Retrieved 10 June 2022.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)