How do you use substitution to integrate #sec(v + pi/2) * tan(v + pi/2)#? Calculus Techniques of Integration Integration by Substitution 1 Answer Sasha P. Sep 22, 2015 See the explanation. Explanation: #t=1/sec(v+pi/2)# #dt=((sec(v+pi/2))^-1)'dv=# #dt=-1/sec^2(v+pi/2)sec(v+pi/2)tan(v+pi/2)dv# #dt=-(tan(v+pi/2)dv)/sec(v+pi/2)=-t tan(v+pi/2)dv# #tan(v+pi/2)dv=-dt/t# #int sec(v+pi/2) tan(v+pi/2) dv=int 1/t(-dt/t)=# #=-int t^-2dt=1/t+C=sec(v+pi/2)+C# Answer link Related questions What is Integration by Substitution? How is integration by substitution related to the chain rule? How do you know When to use integration by substitution? How do you use Integration by Substitution to find #intx^2*sqrt(x^3+1)dx#? How do you use Integration by Substitution to find #intdx/(1-6x)^4dx#? How do you use Integration by Substitution to find #intcos^3(x)*sin(x)dx#? How do you use Integration by Substitution to find #intx*sin(x^2)dx#? How do you use Integration by Substitution to find #intdx/(5-3x)#? How do you use Integration by Substitution to find #intx/(x^2+1)dx#? How do you use Integration by Substitution to find #inte^x*cos(e^x)dx#? See all questions in Integration by Substitution Impact of this question 2628 views around the world You can reuse this answer Creative Commons License