How do I prove these?
$$\int_{-\infty}^{\infty}{\sin(x+a)\over (x+b)^2+1}dx={\pi\over e}\color{blue}{\sin(a-b)}\tag1$$
$$\int_{-\infty}^{\infty}{\cos(x+a)\over (x+b)^2+1}dx={\pi\over e}\color{blue}{\cos(a-b)}\tag2$$
I am trying to apply the residue theorem to $(2)$
$$f(x)={\cos(x+a)\over (x+b)^2+1}$$
$(x+b)^2+1$=$(x+b-i)(x+b+i)$
$$2\pi{i}Res(f(x),-b-i)=2\pi{i}\lim_{x\rightarrow -b-i}{\cos(a-b-i)\over -2i}=-\pi\cos(a-b-i)$$
$$2\pi{i}Res(f(x),-b+i)=2\pi{i}\lim_{x\rightarrow -b+i}{\cos(a-b+i)\over 2i}=\pi\cos(a-b+i)$$
How do I suppose to evaluate $\cos(a-b-i)$ and $\cos(a-b+i)$?
$$\int_{-\infty}^{\infty}{\cos(x+a)\over (x+b)^2+1}dx=\cos (a-b)\int_{-\infty}^{\infty}{\cos x\over x^2+1}dx-\sin (a-b)\int_{-\infty}^{\infty}{\sin x\over x^2+1}dx$$ Let $\lambda\in\mathbb{R}$, set $$I(\lambda)=\int_{-\infty}^{\infty}{\cos(\lambda x)\over x^2+1}dx$$ we use integrate by parts, writing
$$u=\frac{1}{{{x}^{2}}+1}\quad,\quad dv=\cos (\lambda x)$$ we have $$I(\lambda )=\frac{\sin (\lambda x)}{\lambda ({{x}^{2}}+1)}\left| \begin{matrix} \infty \\ -\infty \\ \end{matrix} \right.+\frac{2}{\lambda }\int_{-\infty }^{+\infty }{\frac{\sin (\lambda x)}{{{({{x}^{2}}+1)}^{2}}}}\,dx $$ as a result $$\lambda I(\lambda )=2\int_{-\infty }^{\infty }{\frac{x\sin \lambda x}{{{({{x}^{2}}+1)}^{2}}}\,}dx \,.\quad(1)$$ By differentiate with respect $\lambda$ to get $$\lambda \frac{dI}{d\lambda }+I(\lambda )=2\int_{-\infty }^{\infty }{\frac{{{x}^{2}}\cos \lambda x}{{{({{x}^{2}}+1)}^{2}}}\,}dx=\underbrace{2\int_{-\infty }^{\infty }{\frac{\cos \lambda x}{{{x}^{2}}+1}\,}dx}_{2I(\lambda )}-2\int_{-\infty }^{\infty }{\frac{\cos \lambda x}{{{({{x}^{2}}+1)}^{2}}}\,}dx$$ therefore $$\lambda \frac{dI}{d\lambda }-I(\lambda )=-2\int_{-\infty }^{\infty }{\frac{\cos \lambda x}{{{({{x}^{2}}+1)}^{2}}}\,}dx$$
and $$\lambda \frac{{{d}^{2}}I}{d{{\lambda }^{2}}}=2\int_{-\infty }^{\infty }{\frac{x\sin \lambda x}{{{({{x}^{2}}+1)}^{2}}}\,}dx.\quad(2)$$ $(1)$ and $(2)$ $$\frac{{{d}^{2}}I(\lambda)}{d{{\lambda }^{2}}}- I(\lambda )=0$$ thus $$I(\lambda)=c_1e^{\lambda}+c_2e^{-\lambda}$$ on the other hand \begin{align} & I(0)={{c}_{1}}+{{c}_{2}}=\int_{-\infty }^{+\infty }{\frac{1}{{{x}^{2}}+1}}\,dx=\pi \,\,\,\,\Rightarrow \,\,{{c}_{1}}+{{c}_{2}}=\pi \, \\ & I(\lambda )=\frac{2}{\lambda }\int_{-\infty }^{+\infty }{\frac{x\sin \lambda x}{{{({{x}^{2}}+1)}^{2}}}\,\,}dx\,\,\,\Rightarrow \,\,\underset{\lambda \to \infty }{\mathop{\lim }}\,I(\lambda )=0\,\,\,\Rightarrow \,{{c}_{1}}=0 \\ \end{align} then $$I(\lambda )=\pi {{e}^{-\lambda }}$$ set $\lambda=1$, we have
Now set $$J(\lambda)=\int_{-\infty}^{\infty}{\sin(\lambda x)\over x^2+1}dx$$ WE repeat this produce,to get $$J(\lambda)=c_1e^{\lambda}+c_2e^{-\lambda}$$ and \begin{align} & J(0)={{c}_{1}}+{{c}_{2}}=0 \\ & \underset{\lambda \to \infty }{\mathop{\lim }}\,J(\lambda )=0\Rightarrow \,{{c}_{1}}=0 \\ \end{align} i.e. $J(\lambda)=0$ thus