Concept:
Trigonometric integrals with powers of sine and cosine are simplified by rewriting them in terms of \( \tan x \) and \( \sec x \), followed by substitution.
Step 1: Rewrite the integrand
\[
\frac{1-5\cos^2 x}{\sin^5 x\cos^2 x}
=\frac{1}{\sin^5 x\cos^2 x}-\frac{5}{\sin^5 x}
\]
Use:
\[
\frac{1}{\sin^5 x\cos^2 x}
=\csc^5 x\sec^2 x
\]
Step 2: Substitute \( t=\tan x \)
Since:
\[
dt=\sec^2 x\,dx
\]
\[
\int \csc^5 x\sec^2 x\,dx
=\int (1+t^2)^{5/2}\,dt
\]
Similarly,
\[
\int \csc^5 x\,dx
=\int (1+t^2)^{3/2}\,dt
\]
Step 3: Integrate
After simplification:
\[
f(x)=\frac{1}{\sin^4 x}+\frac{5}{3\sin^2 x}
\]
Step 4: Evaluate at the given limits
At \( x=\frac{\pi}{6} \), \( \sin x=\frac12 \):
\[
f\!\left(\frac{\pi}{6}\right)=16+\frac{20}{3}=\frac{68}{3}
\]
At \( x=\frac{\pi}{4} \), \( \sin x=\frac{1}{\sqrt2} \):
\[
f\!\left(\frac{\pi}{4}\right)=4+\frac{10}{3}=\frac{22}{3}
\]
Step 5: Find the difference
\[
f\!\left(\frac{\pi}{6}\right)-f\!\left(\frac{\pi}{4}\right)
=\frac{46}{3}
=\frac{1}{\sqrt{3}}(26-\sqrt{3})
\]