Asymptotic integral expansion of $\int_0^{\infty} t^{3/4}e^{-x(t^2+2t^4)}dt$ for $x \to \infty$
Solution 1:
The basic idea is that the maximum contribution of the integral comes from a neighborhood of $t=0$, and near there we have $t^2+2t^4 \approx t^2$. This problem is particularly nice because we can do everything explicitly. I'll do the calculation in two steps (two changes of variables) to illustrate what's going on.
Start with the change of variables $t^2+2t^4 = s^2$, where $s \geq 0$. This gives
$$ t=\frac{1}{2}\sqrt{-1+\sqrt{1+8s^2}}, $$
so that the integral becomes
$$ \int_0^{\infty} t^{3/4}e^{-x(t^2+2t^4)}\,dt = \int_0^\infty s^{3/4} f(s) e^{-xs^2}\,ds, $$
where
$$ f(s) = \frac{2^{1/4}s^{1/4}}{\sqrt{1+8s^2}\left(-1+\sqrt{1+8s^2}\right)^{1/8}} = 1 - \frac{15}{4}s^2 + \frac{713}{32}s^4 + \cdots. $$
Now we can make the second change of variables $s^2 = r$ to put the integral into a form where we can directly apply Watson's lemma. Indeed, this gives
$$ \int_0^\infty s^{3/4} f(s) e^{-xs^2}\,ds = \int_0^\infty r^{-1/8} g(r) e^{-xr}\,dr, $$
where
$$ g(r) = \frac{1}{2}f\left(\sqrt{r}\right) = \frac{1}{2} - \frac{15}{8}r + \frac{713}{64}r^2 + \cdots. $$
Finally
$$ \begin{align*} \int_0^\infty r^{-1/8} g(r) e^{-xr}\,dr &\approx \sum_{n=0}^{\infty} \frac{g^{(n)}(0) \Gamma(n+7/8)}{n! x^{n+7/8}} \\ &= \frac{1}{2}\Gamma\left(\frac{7}{8}\right) x^{-7/8} - \frac{15}{8}\Gamma\left(\frac{15}{8}\right)x^{-15/8} + O\left(x^{-23/8}\right) \end{align*} $$
as $x \to \infty$, by Watson's lemma.
Solution 2:
In summary, just look for the minimum of the function $2t^4+t^2$ which gives the location of the major contribution to the integral. The minimum of $2t^4+t^2$ is attained at the point $t=0$. So, we have
$$ \int_0^{\infty} t^{3/4}e^{-x(t^2+2t^4)}dt \sim \int_0^{\infty} t^{3/4}e^{-xt^2}dt = \frac{\Gamma \left( {\frac {7}{8}} \right)}{2 {x}^{ {\frac {7}{8}} }\, }.$$
To evaluate the last integral use the change of variables $ u=xt^2 $ to transform the integral to the gamma function.
Note: If instead of the function $t^2+2t^4$, you have $g(t)$ and attains its minimum at the point $0$, then just use the Taylor series to get the leading term.