Partial fraction expansions provide an approach to integrating a general rational function. Any rational function of a real variable can be written as the sum of a polynomial and a finite number of rational fractions whose denominator is the power of an irreducible polynomial and whose numerator has a degree lower than the degree of this irreducible polynomial. Here are some common examples.
A 1st-Degree Polynomial in the Denominator
The substitution
A Repeated 1st-Degree Polynomial in the Denominator
The same substitution reduces such integrals as
An Irreducible 2nd-Degree Polynomial in the Denominator
Next we consider integrals such as
The quickest way to see that the denominator,
and observe that this sum of two squares can never be
we would need to find
The substitution handles the first summand, thus:
Note that the reason we can discard the absolute value sign is that, as we observed earlier,
Next we must treat the integral
With a little more algebra,
Putting it all together: