Calculus III – Integration


Calculus III – Integration

Study Outline

Overview of Calculus III – Integration

Explanation: Introduction to the fundamental concepts of integration in calculus. What Will Be Taught: Understanding the concept of integral, basic integration techniques, and applications of integrals. Why It’s Important: Integration is a core concept in calculus, essential for calculating area volumes and solving real-world problems in physics, engineering, and economics.

Introduction to Integrals

Explanation: Understanding the concept of an integral in calculus. What Will Be Taught: Definition of an integral, the relationship between integration and differentiation, and the interpretation of integrals as areas under curves. Why It’s Important: Integrals provide a mathematical tool to calculate accumulated quantities, such as area, volume, and total change, which are crucial in many scientific and engineering applications.

Basic Integration Techniques

Explanation: Introduction to the basic techniques of integration. What Will Be Taught: Techniques such as substitution, integration by parts, and partial fractions, with examples of how to apply them. Why It’s Important: Mastering these techniques allows for efficient calculation of integrals of more complex functions.

Applications of Integrals

Explanation: Exploring the practical applications of integrals. What Will Be Taught: How integrals are used in calculating areas, volumes, work, and in solving differential equations. Why It’s Important: Understanding integrals’ applications helps solve problems related to accumulation, area calculation, and modeling real-world phenomena.

Study Content

Overview of Calculus III – Integration: Integration is a fundamental operation in calculus that measures the accumulation of quantities, such as areas under curves, volumes, and total change. It has broad applications in physics, engineering, economics, and other fields where accumulation and total quantities are analyzed.

Introduction to Integrals: An integral represents the accumulation of a quantity over an interval. It is the reverse operation of differentiation and is defined as the limit of a sum of areas of rectangles as the width of the rectangles approaches zero.

  1. Definition of an Integral: The integral of a function f(x)f(x)f(x) from aaa to bbb is defined as:

∫abf(x) dx=lim⁡n→∞∑i=1nf(xi)Δx\int_a^b f(x) \, dx = \lim_{n \to \infty} \sum_{i=1}^n f(x_i) \Delta x∫ab​f(x)dx=n→∞lim​i=1∑n​f(xi​)Δx

where Δx=b−an\Delta x = \frac{b-a}{n}Δx=nb−a​ and xix_ixi​ are the sample points in the interval.

Example 1: Find the integral of f(x)=2xf(x) = 2xf(x)=2x from 0 to 3:

∫032x dx=[x2]03=9−0=9\int_0^3 2x \, dx = \left[ x^2 \right]_0^3 = 9 – 0 = 9∫03​2xdx=[x2]03​=9−0=9

  1. Relationship Between Integration and Differentiation: Integration is the reverse process of differentiation. The Fundamental Theorem of Calculus states that if F(x)F(x)F(x) is the antiderivative of f(x)f(x)f(x), then:

∫abf(x) dx=F(b)−F(a)\int_a^b f(x) \, dx = F(b) – F(a)∫ab​f(x)dx=F(b)−F(a)

Example 2: If F(x)=13×3+CF(x) = \frac{1}{3}x^3 + CF(x)=31​x3+C, then ddxF(x)=x2\frac{d}{dx}F(x) = x^2dxd​F(x)=x2, so:

∫x2 dx=13×3+C\int x^2 \, dx = \frac{1}{3}x^3 + C∫x2dx=31​x3+C

  1. Interpretation of Integrals as Areas Under Curves: The definite integral ∫abf(x) dx\int_a^b f(x) \, dx∫ab​f(x)dx represents the area under the curve y=f(x)y = f(x)y=f(x) from x=ax = ax=a to x=bx = bx=b.

Example 3: Find the area under the curve y=x2y = x^2y=x2 from x=0x = 0x=0 to x=2x = 2x=2:

∫02×2 dx=[13×3]02=83−0=83\int_0^2 x^2 \, dx = \left[ \frac{1}{3}x^3 \right]_0^2 = \frac{8}{3} – 0 = \frac{8}{3}∫02​x2dx=[31​x3]02​=38​−0=38​

Basic Integration Techniques: Several techniques have been developed to calculate integrals efficiently. These include substitution, integration by parts, and partial fractions.

  1. Substitution: Substitution is used to simplify an integral by making a substitution that reduces the integral to a simpler form.

Example 4: Find the integral of ∫2x⋅x2+1 dx\int 2x \cdot \sqrt{x^2 + 1} \, dx∫2x⋅x2+1​dx by substituting u=x2+1u = x^2 + 1u=x2+1:

∫2x⋅x2+1 dx=∫u du=23u3/2+C=23(x2+1)3/2+C\int 2x \cdot \sqrt{x^2 + 1} \, dx = \int \sqrt{u} \, du = \frac{2}{3} u^{3/2} + C = \frac{2}{3} (x^2 + 1)^{3/2} + C∫2x⋅x2+1​dx=∫u​du=32​u3/2+C=32​(x2+1)3/2+C

  1. Integration by Parts: Integration by parts is based on the product rule for differentiation and is used to integrate the product of two functions:

∫u dv=uv−∫v du\int u \, dv = uv – \int v \, du∫udv=uv−∫vdu

Example 5: Find the integral ∫x⋅ex dx\int x \cdot e^x \, dx∫x⋅exdx using integration by parts, with u=xu = xu=x and dv=ex dxdv = e^x \, dxdv=exdx:

∫x⋅ex dx=x⋅ex−∫ex dx=x⋅ex−ex+C=ex(x−1)+C\int x \cdot e^x \, dx = x \cdot e^x – \int e^x \, dx = x \cdot e^x – e^x + C = e^x(x – 1) + C∫x⋅exdx=x⋅ex−∫exdx=x⋅ex−ex+C=ex(x−1)+C

  1. Partial Fractions: Partial fraction decomposition is used to break down a rational function into simpler fractions that can be integrated individually.

Example 6: Find the integral ∫1×2−1 dx\int \frac{1}{x^2 – 1} \, dx∫x2−11​dx by expressing it as:

1×2−1=12(x−1)−12(x+1)\frac{1}{x^2 – 1} = \frac{1}{2(x – 1)} – \frac{1}{2(x + 1)}x2−11​=2(x−1)1​−2(x+1)1​

Then:

∫1×2−1 dx=12ln⁡∣x−1∣−12ln⁡∣x+1∣+C\int \frac{1}{x^2 – 1} \, dx = \frac{1}{2} \ln|x – 1| – \frac{1}{2} \ln|x + 1| + C∫x2−11​dx=21​ln∣x−1∣−21​ln∣x+1∣+C

Applications of Integrals: Integrals have numerous applications in various fields. They are used to calculate areas, volumes, work, and in solving differential equations.

  1. Area Calculation: Integrals are used to calculate the area under curves, which is essential in fields like physics, engineering, and economics.

Example 7: Find the area between the curves y=x2y = x^2y=x2 and y=xy = xy=x from x=0x = 0x=0 to x=1x = 1x=1:

Area=∫01(x−x2) dx=[x22−x33]01=12−13=16\text{Area} = \int_0^1 (x – x^2) \, dx = \left[ \frac{x^2}{2} – \frac{x^3}{3} \right]_0^1 = \frac{1}{2} – \frac{1}{3} = \frac{1}{6}Area=∫01​(x−x2)dx=[2×2​−3×3​]01​=21​−31​=61​

  1. Volume Calculation: Integrals are used to calculate volumes of solids of revolution by revolving a curve around an axis.

Example 8: Find the volume of the solid formed by revolving the curve y=x2y = x^2y=x2 around the x-axis from x=0x = 0x=0 to x=1x = 1x=1:

V=π∫01(x2)2 dx=π∫01×4 dx=π[x55]01=π5V = \pi \int_0^1 (x^2)^2 \, dx = \pi \int_0^1 x^4 \, dx = \pi \left[ \frac{x^5}{5} \right]_0^1 = \frac{\pi}{5}V=π∫01​(x2)2dx=π∫01​x4dx=π[5×5​]01​=5π​

  1. Work Calculation: Integrals are used to calculate the work done by a force over a distance, which is essential in physics and engineering.

Example 9: Find the work done by a force F(x)=2xF(x) = 2xF(x)=2x over a distance from x=0x = 0x=0 to x=3x = 3x=3:

W=∫032x dx=[x2]03=9−0=9W = \int_0^3 2x \, dx = \left[ x^2 \right]_0^3 = 9 – 0 = 9W=∫03​2xdx=[x2]03​=9−0=9

Summary: This chapter covers the fundamental concepts of integration, including the definition and interpretation of integrals, the basic techniques of integration, and the applications of integrals in various fields. Mastery of these concepts is essential for solving complex problems in calculus and understanding the accumulation of quantities.