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Integral

In mathematics, an integral is the continuous analog of a sum, which is used to calculate areas, volumes, and their generalizations. Integration, the process of computing an integral, is one of the two fundamental operations of calculus,[a] the other being differentiation. Integration started as a method to solve problems in mathematics and physics, such as finding the area under a curve, or determining displacement from velocity. Today integration is used in a wide variety of scientific fields.

A definite integral of a function can be represented as the signed area of the region bounded by its graph and the horizontal axis; in the above graph as an example, the integral of is the yellow (−) area subtracted from the blue (+) area

The integrals depicted here are called definite integrals, which can be interpreted as the signed area of the region in the plane that is bounded by the graph of a given function between two points in the real line. Conventionally, areas above the horizontal axis of the plane are positive while areas below are negative. Integrals also refer to the concept of an antiderivative, a function whose derivative is the given function; in this case, they are also called indefinite integrals. The fundamental theorem of calculus relates definite integration to differentiation and provides a method to compute the definite integral of a function when its antiderivative is known; differentiation and integration are inverse operations.

Although methods of calculating areas and volumes dated from ancient Greek mathematics, the principles of integration were formulated independently by Isaac Newton and Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz in the late 17th century, who thought of the area under a curve as an infinite sum of rectangles of infinitesimal width. Bernhard Riemann later gave a rigorous definition of integrals, which is based on a limiting procedure that approximates the area of a curvilinear region by breaking the region into infinitesimally thin vertical slabs. In the early 20th century, Henri Lebesgue generalized Riemann's formulation by introducing what is now referred to as the Lebesgue integral; it is more general than Riemann's in the sense that a wider class of functions are Lebesgue-integrable.

Integrals may be generalized depending on the type of the function as well as the domain over which the integration is performed. For example, a line integral is defined for functions of two or more variables, and the interval of integration is replaced by a curve connecting two points in space. In a surface integral, the curve is replaced by a piece of a surface in three-dimensional space.

History edit

Pre-calculus integration edit

The first documented systematic technique capable of determining integrals is the method of exhaustion of the ancient Greek astronomer Eudoxus (ca. 370 BC), which sought to find areas and volumes by breaking them up into an infinite number of divisions for which the area or volume was known.[1] This method was further developed and employed by Archimedes in the 3rd century BC and used to calculate the area of a circle, the surface area and volume of a sphere, area of an ellipse, the area under a parabola, the volume of a segment of a paraboloid of revolution, the volume of a segment of a hyperboloid of revolution, and the area of a spiral.[2]

A similar method was independently developed in China around the 3rd century AD by Liu Hui, who used it to find the area of the circle. This method was later used in the 5th century by Chinese father-and-son mathematicians Zu Chongzhi and Zu Geng to find the volume of a sphere.[3]

In the Middle East, Hasan Ibn al-Haytham, Latinized as Alhazen (c. 965 – c. 1040 AD) derived a formula for the sum of fourth powers.[4] He used the results to carry out what would now be called an integration of this function, where the formulae for the sums of integral squares and fourth powers allowed him to calculate the volume of a paraboloid.[5]

The next significant advances in integral calculus did not begin to appear until the 17th century. At this time, the work of Cavalieri with his method of indivisibles, and work by Fermat, began to lay the foundations of modern calculus,[6] with Cavalieri computing the integrals of xn up to degree n = 9 in Cavalieri's quadrature formula.[7] The case n = −1 required the invention of a function, the hyperbolic logarithm, achieved by quadrature of the hyperbola in 1647.

Further steps were made in the early 17th century by Barrow and Torricelli, who provided the first hints of a connection between integration and differentiation. Barrow provided the first proof of the fundamental theorem of calculus.[8] Wallis generalized Cavalieri's method, computing integrals of x to a general power, including negative powers and fractional powers.[9]

Leibniz and Newton edit

The major advance in integration came in the 17th century with the independent discovery of the fundamental theorem of calculus by Leibniz and Newton.[10] The theorem demonstrates a connection between integration and differentiation. This connection, combined with the comparative ease of differentiation, can be exploited to calculate integrals. In particular, the fundamental theorem of calculus allows one to solve a much broader class of problems. Equal in importance is the comprehensive mathematical framework that both Leibniz and Newton developed. Given the name infinitesimal calculus, it allowed for precise analysis of functions with continuous domains. This framework eventually became modern calculus, whose notation for integrals is drawn directly from the work of Leibniz.

Formalization edit

While Newton and Leibniz provided a systematic approach to integration, their work lacked a degree of rigour. Bishop Berkeley memorably attacked the vanishing increments used by Newton, calling them "ghosts of departed quantities".[11] Calculus acquired a firmer footing with the development of limits. Integration was first rigorously formalized, using limits, by Riemann.[12] Although all bounded piecewise continuous functions are Riemann-integrable on a bounded interval, subsequently more general functions were considered—particularly in the context of Fourier analysis—to which Riemann's definition does not apply, and Lebesgue formulated a different definition of integral, founded in measure theory (a subfield of real analysis). Other definitions of integral, extending Riemann's and Lebesgue's approaches, were proposed. These approaches based on the real number system are the ones most common today, but alternative approaches exist, such as a definition of integral as the standard part of an infinite Riemann sum, based on the hyperreal number system.

Historical notation edit

The notation for the indefinite integral was introduced by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz in 1675.[13] He adapted the integral symbol, , from the letter ſ (long s), standing for summa (written as ſumma; Latin for "sum" or "total"). The modern notation for the definite integral, with limits above and below the integral sign, was first used by Joseph Fourier in Mémoires of the French Academy around 1819–1820, reprinted in his book of 1822.[14]

Isaac Newton used a small vertical bar above a variable to indicate integration, or placed the variable inside a box. The vertical bar was easily confused with .x or x, which are used to indicate differentiation, and the box notation was difficult for printers to reproduce, so these notations were not widely adopted.[15]

First use of the term edit

The term was first printed in Latin by Jacob Bernoulli in 1690: "Ergo et horum Integralia aequantur".[16]

Terminology and notation edit

In general, the integral of a real-valued function f(x) with respect to a real variable x on an interval [a, b] is written as

 

The integral sign represents integration. The symbol dx, called the differential of the variable x, indicates that the variable of integration is x. The function f(x) is called the integrand, the points a and b are called the limits (or bounds) of integration, and the integral is said to be over the interval [a, b], called the interval of integration.[17] A function is said to be integrable if its integral over its domain is finite. If limits are specified, the integral is called a definite integral.

When the limits are omitted, as in

 

the integral is called an indefinite integral, which represents a class of functions (the antiderivative) whose derivative is the integrand.[18] The fundamental theorem of calculus relates the evaluation of definite integrals to indefinite integrals. There are several extensions of the notation for integrals to encompass integration on unbounded domains and/or in multiple dimensions (see later sections of this article).

In advanced settings, it is not uncommon to leave out dx when only the simple Riemann integral is being used, or the exact type of integral is immaterial. For instance, one might write   to express the linearity of the integral, a property shared by the Riemann integral and all generalizations thereof.[19]

Interpretations edit

 
Approximations to integral of x from 0 to 1, with 5 yellow right endpoint partitions and 10 green left endpoint partitions

Integrals appear in many practical situations. For instance, from the length, width and depth of a swimming pool which is rectangular with a flat bottom, one can determine the volume of water it can contain, the area of its surface, and the length of its edge. But if it is oval with a rounded bottom, integrals are required to find exact and rigorous values for these quantities. In each case, one may divide the sought quantity into infinitely many infinitesimal pieces, then sum the pieces to achieve an accurate approximation.

As another example, to find the area of the region bounded by the graph of the function f(x) =   between x = 0 and x = 1, one can divide the interval into five pieces (0, 1/5, 2/5, ..., 1), then construct rectangle2 using the right end height of each piece (thus 0, 1/5, 2/5, ..., 1) and sum their areas to get the approximation

 

which is larger than the exact value. Alternatively, when replacing these subintervals by ones with the left end height of each piece, the approximation one gets is too low: with twelve such subintervals the approximated area is only 0.6203. However, when the number of pieces increases to infinity, it will reach a limit which is the exact value of the area sought (in this case, 2/3). One writes

 

which means 2/3 is the result of a weighted sum of function values, x, multiplied by the infinitesimal step widths, denoted by dx, on the interval [0, 1].

Darboux sums
 
Darboux upper sums of the function y = x2
 
Darboux lower sums of the function y = x2

Formal definitions edit

 
Riemann sums converging

There are many ways of formally defining an integral, not all of which are equivalent. The differences exist mostly to deal with differing special cases which may not be integrable under other definitions, but are also occasionally for pedagogical reasons. The most commonly used definitions are Riemann integrals and Lebesgue integrals.

Riemann integral edit

The Riemann integral is defined in terms of Riemann sums of functions with respect to tagged partitions of an interval.[20] A tagged partition of a closed interval [a, b] on the real line is a finite sequence

 

This partitions the interval [a, b] into n sub-intervals [xi−1, xi] indexed by i, each of which is "tagged" with a specific point ti ∈ [xi−1, xi]. A Riemann sum of a function f with respect to such a tagged partition is defined as

 

thus each term of the sum is the area of a rectangle with height equal to the function value at the chosen point of the given sub-interval, and width the same as the width of sub-interval, Δi = xixi−1. The mesh of such a tagged partition is the width of the largest sub-interval formed by the partition, maxi=1...n Δi. The Riemann integral of a function f over the interval [a, b] is equal to S if:[21]

For all   there exists   such that, for any tagged partition   with mesh less than  ,
 

When the chosen tags are the maximum (respectively, minimum) value of the function in each interval, the Riemann sum becomes an upper (respectively, lower) Darboux sum, suggesting the close connection between the Riemann integral and the Darboux integral.

Lebesgue integral edit

 
Lebesgue integration

It is often of interest, both in theory and applications, to be able to pass to the limit under the integral. For instance, a sequence of functions can frequently be constructed that approximate, in a suitable sense, the solution to a problem. Then the integral of the solution function should be the limit of the integrals of the approximations. However, many functions that can be obtained as limits are not Riemann-integrable, and so such limit theorems do not hold with the Riemann integral. Therefore, it is of great importance to have a definition of the integral that allows a wider class of functions to be integrated.[22]

Such an integral is the Lebesgue integral, that exploits the following fact to enlarge the class of integrable functions: if the values of a function are rearranged over the domain, the integral of a function should remain the same. Thus Henri Lebesgue introduced the integral bearing his name, explaining this integral thus in a letter to Paul Montel:[23]

I have to pay a certain sum, which I have collected in my pocket. I take the bills and coins out of my pocket and give them to the creditor in the order I find them until I have reached the total sum. This is the Riemann integral. But I can proceed differently. After I have taken all the money out of my pocket I order the bills and coins according to identical values and then I pay the several heaps one after the other to the creditor. This is my integral.

As Folland puts it, "To compute the Riemann integral of f, one partitions the domain [a, b] into subintervals", while in the Lebesgue integral, "one is in effect partitioning the range of f ".[24] The definition of the Lebesgue integral thus begins with a measure, μ. In the simplest case, the Lebesgue measure μ(A) of an interval A = [a, b] is its width, ba, so that the Lebesgue integral agrees with the (proper) Riemann integral when both exist.[25] In more complicated cases, the sets being measured can be highly fragmented, with no continuity and no resemblance to intervals.

Using the "partitioning the range of f " philosophy, the integral of a non-negative function f : RR should be the sum over t of the areas between a thin horizontal strip between y = t and y = t + dt. This area is just μ{ x : f(x) > t} dt. Let f(t) = μ{ x : f(x) > t }. The Lebesgue integral of f is then defined by

 

where the integral on the right is an ordinary improper Riemann integral (f is a strictly decreasing positive function, and therefore has a well-defined improper Riemann integral).[26] For a suitable class of functions (the measurable functions) this defines the Lebesgue integral.

A general measurable function f is Lebesgue-integrable if the sum of the absolute values of the areas of the regions between the graph of f and the x-axis is finite:[27]

 

In that case, the integral is, as in the Riemannian case, the difference between the area above the x-axis and the area below the x-axis:[28]

 

where

 

Other integrals edit

Although the Riemann and Lebesgue integrals are the most widely used definitions of the integral, a number of others exist, including:

Properties edit

Linearity edit

The collection of Riemann-integrable functions on a closed interval [a, b] forms a vector space under the operations of pointwise addition and multiplication by a scalar, and the operation of integration

 

is a linear functional on this vector space. Thus, the collection of integrable functions is closed under taking linear combinations, and the integral of a linear combination is the linear combination of the integrals:[29]

 

Similarly, the set of real-valued Lebesgue-integrable functions on a given measure space E with measure μ is closed under taking linear combinations and hence form a vector space, and the Lebesgue integral

 

is a linear functional on this vector space, so that:[28]

 

More generally, consider the vector space of all measurable functions on a measure space (E,μ), taking values in a locally compact complete topological vector space V over a locally compact topological field K, f : EV. Then one may define an abstract integration map assigning to each function f an element of V or the symbol ,

 

that is compatible with linear combinations.[30] In this situation, the linearity holds for the subspace of functions whose integral is an element of V (i.e. "finite"). The most important special cases arise when K is R, C, or a finite extension of the field Qp of p-adic numbers, and V is a finite-dimensional vector space over K, and when K = C and V is a complex Hilbert space.

Linearity, together with some natural continuity properties and normalization for a certain class of "simple" functions, may be used to give an alternative definition of the integral. This is the approach of Daniell for the case of real-valued functions on a set X, generalized by Nicolas Bourbaki to functions with values in a locally compact topological vector space. See Hildebrandt 1953 for an axiomatic characterization of the integral.

Inequalities edit

A number of general inequalities hold for Riemann-integrable functions defined on a closed and bounded interval [a, b] and can be generalized to other notions of integral (Lebesgue and Daniell).

  • Upper and lower bounds. An integrable function f on [a, b], is necessarily bounded on that interval. Thus there are real numbers m and M so that mf (x) ≤ M for all x in [a, b]. Since the lower and upper sums of f over [a, b] are therefore bounded by, respectively, m(ba) and M(ba), it follows that
     
  • Inequalities between functions.[31] If f(x) ≤ g(x) for each x in [a, b] then each of the upper and lower sums of f is bounded above by the upper and lower sums, respectively, of g. Thus
     
    This is a generalization of the above inequalities, as M(ba) is the integral of the constant function with value M over [a, b]. In addition, if the inequality between functions is strict, then the inequality between integrals is also strict. That is, if f(x) < g(x) for each x in [a, b], then
     
  • Subintervals. If [c, d] is a subinterval of [a, b] and f (x) is non-negative for all x, then
     
  • Products and absolute values of functions. If f and g are two functions, then we may consider their pointwise products and powers, and absolute values:
     
    If f is Riemann-integrable on [a, b] then the same is true for |f|, and
     
    Moreover, if f and g are both Riemann-integrable then fg is also Riemann-integrable, and
     
    This inequality, known as the Cauchy–Schwarz inequality, plays a prominent role in Hilbert space theory, where the left hand side is interpreted as the inner product of two square-integrable functions f and g on the interval [a, b].
  • Hölder's inequality.[32] Suppose that p and q are two real numbers, 1 ≤ p, q ≤ ∞ with 1/p + 1/q = 1, and f and g are two Riemann-integrable functions. Then the functions |f|p and |g|q are also integrable and the following Hölder's inequality holds:
     
    For p = q = 2, Hölder's inequality becomes the Cauchy–Schwarz inequality.
  • Minkowski inequality.[32] Suppose that p ≥ 1 is a real number and f and g are Riemann-integrable functions. Then | f |p, | g |p and | f + g |p are also Riemann-integrable and the following Minkowski inequality holds:
     
    An analogue of this inequality for Lebesgue integral is used in construction of Lp spaces.

Conventions edit

In this section, f is a real-valued Riemann-integrable function. The integral

 

over an interval [a, b] is defined if a < b. This means that the upper and lower sums of the function f are evaluated on a partition a = x0x1 ≤ . . . ≤ xn = b whose values xi are increasing. Geometrically, this signifies that integration takes place "left to right", evaluating f within intervals [xi , xi +1] where an interval with a higher index lies to the right of one with a lower index. The values a and b, the end-points of the interval, are called the limits of integration of f. Integrals can also be defined if a > b:[17]

 

With a = b, this implies:

 

The first convention is necessary in consideration of taking integrals over subintervals of [a, b]; the second says that an integral taken over a degenerate interval, or a point, should be zero. One reason for the first convention is that the integrability of f on an interval [a, b] implies that f is integrable on any subinterval [c, d], but in particular integrals have the property that if c is any element of [a, b], then:[29]

 

With the first convention, the resulting relation

 

is then well-defined for any cyclic permutation of a, b, and c.

Fundamental theorem of calculus edit

The fundamental theorem of calculus is the statement that differentiation and integration are inverse operations: if a continuous function is first integrated and then differentiated, the original function is retrieved.[33] An important consequence, sometimes called the second fundamental theorem of calculus, allows one to compute integrals by using an antiderivative of the function to be integrated.[34]

First theorem edit

Let f be a continuous real-valued function defined on a closed interval [a, b]. Let F be the function defined, for all x in [a, b], by[35]

 

Then, F is continuous on [a, b], differentiable on the open interval (a, b), and

 

for all x in (a, b).

Second theorem edit

Let f be a real-valued function defined on a closed interval [a, b] that admits an antiderivative F on [a, b]. That is, f and F are functions such that for all x in [a, b],

 

If f is integrable on [a, b] then

 

Extensions edit

Improper integrals edit

 
The improper integral  has unbounded intervals for both domain and range.

A "proper" Riemann integral assumes the integrand is defined and finite on a closed and bounded interval, bracketed by the limits of integration. An improper integral occurs when one or more of these conditions is not satisfied. In some cases such integrals may be defined by considering the limit of a sequence of proper Riemann integrals on progressively larger intervals.

If the interval is unbounded, for instance at its upper end, then the improper integral is the limit as that endpoint goes to infinity:[36]

 

If the integrand is only defined or finite on a half-open interval, for instance (a, b], then again a limit may provide a finite result:[37]

 

That is, the improper integral is the limit of proper integrals as one endpoint of the interval of integration approaches either a specified real number, or , or −∞. In more complicated cases, limits are required at both endpoints, or at interior points.

Multiple integration edit

 
Double integral computes volume under a surface  

Just as the definite integral of a positive function of one variable represents the area of the region between the graph of the function and the x-axis, the double integral of a positive function of two variables represents the volume of the region between the surface defined by the function and the plane that contains its domain.[38] For example, a function in two dimensions depends on two real variables, x and y, and the integral of a function f over the rectangle R given as the Cartesian product of two intervals   can be written

 

where the differential dA indicates that integration is taken with respect to area. This double integral can be defined using Riemann sums, and represents the (signed) volume under the graph of z = f(x,y) over the domain R.[39] Under suitable conditions (e.g., if f is continuous), Fubini's theorem states that this integral can be expressed as an equivalent iterated integral[40]

 

This reduces the problem of computing a double integral to computing one-dimensional integrals. Because of this, another notation for the integral over R uses a double integral sign:[39]

 

Integration over more general domains is possible. The integral of a function f, with respect to volume, over an n-dimensional region D of   is denoted by symbols such as:

 

Line integrals and surface integrals edit

 
A line integral sums together elements along a curve.

The concept of an integral can be extended to more general domains of integration, such as curved lines and surfaces inside higher-dimensional spaces. Such integrals are known as line integrals and surface integrals respectively. These have important applications in physics, as when dealing with vector fields.

A line integral (sometimes called a path integral) is an integral where the function to be integrated is evaluated along a curve.[41] Various different line integrals are in use. In the case of a closed curve it is also called a contour integral.

The function to be integrated may be a scalar field or a vector field. The value of the line integral is the sum of values of the field at all points on the curve, weighted by some scalar function on the curve (commonly arc length or, for a vector field, the scalar product of the vector field with a differential vector in the curve).[42] This weighting distinguishes the line integral from simpler integrals defined on intervals. Many simple formulas in physics have natural continuous analogs in terms of line integrals; for example, the fact that work is equal to force, F, multiplied by displacement, s, may be expressed (in terms of vector quantities) as:[43]

 

For an object moving along a path C in a vector field F such as an electric field or gravitational field, the total work done by the field on the object is obtained by summing up the differential work done in moving from s to s + ds. This gives the line integral[44]

 
 
The definition of surface integral relies on splitting the surface into small surface elements.

A surface integral generalizes double integrals to integration over a surface (which may be a curved set in space); it can be thought of as the double integral analog of the line integral. The function to be integrated may be a scalar field or a vector field. The value of the surface integral is the sum of the field at all points on the surface. This can be achieved by splitting the surface into surface elements, which provide the partitioning for Riemann sums.[45]

For an example of applications of surface integrals, consider a vector field v on a surface S; that is, for each point x in S, v(x) is a vector. Imagine that a fluid flows through S, such that v(x) determines the velocity of the fluid at x. The flux is defined as the quantity of fluid flowing through S in unit amount of time. To find the flux, one need to take the dot product of v with the unit surface normal to S at each point, which will give a scalar field, which is integrated over the surface:[46]

 

The fluid flux in this example may be from a physical fluid such as water or air, or from electrical or magnetic flux. Thus surface integrals have applications in physics, particularly with the classical theory of electromagnetism.

Contour integrals edit

In complex analysis, the integrand is a complex-valued function of a complex variable z instead of a real function of a real variable x. When a complex function is integrated along a curve   in the complex plane, the integral is denoted as follows

 

This is known as a contour integral.

Integrals of differential forms edit

A differential form is a mathematical concept in the fields of multivariable calculus, differential topology, and tensors. Differential forms are organized by degree. For example, a one-form is a weighted sum of the differentials of the coordinates, such as:

 

where E, F, G are functions in three dimensions. A differential one-form can be integrated over an oriented path, and the resulting integral is just another way of writing a line integral. Here the basic differentials dx, dy, dz measure infinitesimal oriented lengths parallel to the three coordinate axes.

A differential two-form is a sum of the form

 

Here the basic two-forms   measure oriented areas parallel to the coordinate two-planes. The symbol   denotes the wedge product, which is similar to the cross product in the sense that the wedge product of two forms representing oriented lengths represents an oriented area. A two-form can be integrated over an oriented surface, and the resulting integral is equivalent to the surface integral giving the flux of  .

Unlike the cross product, and the three-dimensional vector calculus, the wedge product and the calculus of differential forms makes sense in arbitrary dimension and on more general manifolds (curves, surfaces, and their higher-dimensional analogs). The exterior derivative plays the role of the gradient and curl of vector calculus, and Stokes' theorem simultaneously generalizes the three theorems of vector calculus: the divergence theorem, Green's theorem, and the Kelvin-Stokes theorem.

Summations edit

The discrete equivalent of integration is summation. Summations and integrals can be put on the same foundations using the theory of Lebesgue integrals or time-scale calculus.

Functional integrals edit

An integration that is performed not over a variable (or, in physics, over a space or time dimension), but over a space of functions, is referred to as a functional integral.

Applications edit

Integrals are used extensively in many areas. For example, in probability theory, integrals are used to determine the probability of some random variable falling within a certain range.[47] Moreover, the integral under an entire probability density function must equal 1, which provides a test of whether a function with no negative values could be a density function or not.[48]

Integrals can be used for computing the area of a two-dimensional region that has a curved boundary, as well as computing the volume of a three-dimensional object that has a curved boundary. The area of a two-dimensional region can be calculated using the aforementioned definite integral.[49] The volume of a three-dimensional object such as a disc or washer can be computed by disc integration using the equation for the volume of a cylinder,  , where   is the radius. In the case of a simple disc created by rotating a curve about the x-axis, the radius is given by f(x), and its height is the differential dx. Using an integral with bounds a and b, the volume of the disc is equal to:[50]

 
Integrals are also used in physics, in areas like kinematics to find quantities like displacement, time, and velocity. For example, in rectilinear motion, the displacement of an object over the time interval   is given by:
 

where   is the velocity expressed as a function of time.[51] The work done by a force   (given as a function of position) from an initial position   to a final position   is:[52]

 

Integrals are also used in thermodynamics, where thermodynamic integration is used to calculate the difference in free energy between two given states.

Computation edit

Analytical edit

The most basic technique for computing definite integrals of one real variable is based on the fundamental theorem of calculus. Let f(x) be the function of x to be integrated over a given interval [a, b]. Then, find an antiderivative of f; that is, a function F such that F′ = f on the interval. Provided the integrand and integral have no singularities on the path of integration, by the fundamental theorem of calculus,

 

Sometimes it is necessary to use one of the many techniques that have been developed to evaluate integrals. Most of these techniques rewrite one integral as a different one which is hopefully more tractable. Techniques include integration by substitution, integration by parts, integration by trigonometric substitution, and integration by partial fractions.

Alternative methods exist to compute more complex integrals. Many nonelementary integrals can be expanded in a Taylor series and integrated term by term. Occasionally, the resulting infinite series can be summed analytically. The method of convolution using Meijer G-functions can also be used, assuming that the integrand can be written as a product of Meijer G-functions. There are also many less common ways of calculating definite integrals; for instance, Parseval's identity can be used to transform an integral over a rectangular region into an infinite sum. Occasionally, an integral can be evaluated by a trick; for an example of this, see Gaussian integral.

Computations of volumes of solids of revolution can usually be done with disk integration or shell integration.

Specific results which have been worked out by various techniques are collected in the list of integrals.

Symbolic edit

Many problems in mathematics, physics, and engineering involve integration where an explicit formula for the integral is desired. Extensive tables of integrals have been compiled and published over the years for this purpose. With the spread of computers, many professionals, educators, and students have turned to computer algebra systems that are specifically designed to perform difficult or tedious tasks, including integration. Symbolic integration has been one of the motivations for the development of the first such systems, like Macsyma and Maple.

A major mathematical difficulty in symbolic integration is that in many cases, a relatively simple function does not have integrals that can be expressed in closed form involving only elementary functions, include rational and exponential functions, logarithm, trigonometric functions and inverse trigonometric functions, and the operations of multiplication and composition. The Risch algorithm provides a general criterion to determine whether the antiderivative of an elementary function is elementary and to compute the integral if is elementary. However, functions with closed expressions of antiderivatives are the exception, and consequently, computerized algebra systems have no hope of being able to find an antiderivative for a randomly constructed elementary function. On the positive side, if the 'building blocks' for antiderivatives are fixed in advance, it may still be possible to decide whether the antiderivative of a given function can be expressed using these blocks and operations of multiplication and composition and to find the symbolic answer whenever it exists. The Risch algorithm, implemented in Mathematica, Maple and other computer algebra systems, does just that for functions and antiderivatives built from rational functions, radicals, logarithm, and exponential functions.

Some special integrands occur often enough to warrant special study. In particular, it may be useful to have, in the set of antiderivatives, the special functions (like the Legendre functions, the hypergeometric function, the gamma function, the incomplete gamma function and so on). Extending Risch's algorithm to include such functions is possible but challenging and has been an active research subject.

More recently a new approach has emerged, using D-finite functions, which are the solutions of linear differential equations with polynomial coefficients. Most of the elementary and special functions are D-finite, and the integral of a D-finite function is also a D-finite function. This provides an algorithm to express the antiderivative of a D-finite function as the solution of a differential equation. This theory also allows one to compute the definite integral of a D-function as the sum of a series given by the first coefficients and provides an algorithm to compute any coefficient.

Rule-based integration systems facilitate integration. Rubi, a computer algebra system rule-based integrator, pattern matches an extensive system of symbolic integration rules to integrate a wide variety of integrands. This system uses over 6600 integration rules to compute integrals.[53] The method of brackets is a generalization of Ramanujan's master theorem that can be applied to a wide range of univariate and multivariate integrals. A set of rules are applied to the coefficients and exponential terms of the integrand's power series expansion to determine the integral. The method is closely related to the Mellin transform.[54]

Numerical edit

 
Numerical quadrature methods: rectangle method, trapezoidal rule, Romberg's method, Gaussian quadrature

Definite integrals may be approximated using several methods of numerical integration. The rectangle method relies on dividing the region under the function into a series of rectangles corresponding to function values and multiplies by the step width to find the sum. A better approach, the trapezoidal rule, replaces the rectangles used in a Riemann sum with trapezoids. The trapezoidal rule weights the first and last values by one half, then multiplies by the step width to obtain a better approximation.[55] The idea behind the trapezoidal rule, that more accurate approximations to the function yield better approximations to the integral, can be carried further: Simpson's rule approximates the integrand by a piecewise quadratic function.[56]

Riemann sums, the trapezoidal rule, and Simpson's rule are examples of a family of quadrature rules called the Newton–Cotes formulas. The degree n Newton–Cotes quadrature rule approximates the polynomial on each subinterval by a degree n polynomial. This polynomial is chosen to interpolate the values of the function on the interval.[57] Higher degree Newton–Cotes approximations can be more accurate, but they require more function evaluations, and they can suffer from numerical inaccuracy due to Runge's phenomenon. One solution to this problem is Clenshaw–Curtis quadrature, in which the integrand is approximated by expanding it in terms of Chebyshev polynomials.

Romberg's method halves the step widths incrementally, giving trapezoid approximations denoted by T(h0), T(h1), and so on, where hk+1 is half of hk. For each new step size, only half the new function values need to be computed; the others carry over from the previous size. It then interpolate a polynomial through the approximations, and extrapolate to T(0). Gaussian quadrature evaluates the function at the roots of a set of orthogonal polynomials.[58] An n-point Gaussian method is exact for polynomials of degree up to 2n − 1.

The computation of higher-dimensional integrals (for example, volume calculations) makes important use of such alternatives as Monte Carlo integration.[59]

Mechanical edit

The area of an arbitrary two-dimensional shape can be determined using a measuring instrument called planimeter. The volume of irregular objects can be measured with precision by the fluid displaced as the object is submerged.

Geometrical edit

Area can sometimes be found via geometrical compass-and-straightedge constructions of an equivalent square.

Integration by differentiation edit

Kempf, Jackson and Morales demonstrated mathematical relations that allow an integral to be calculated by means of differentiation. Their calculus involves the Dirac delta function and the partial derivative operator  . This can also be applied to functional integrals, allowing them to be computed by functional differentiation.[60]

Examples edit

Using the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus edit

The fundamental theorem of calculus allows for straightforward calculations of basic functions.

 

See also edit

  • Integral equation – Equations with an unknown function under an integral sign
  • Integral symbol – Mathematical symbol used to denote integrals and antiderivatives

Notes edit

  1. ^ Integral calculus is a very well established mathematical discipline for which there are many sources. See Apostol 1967 and Anton, Bivens & Davis 2016, for example.

References edit

  1. ^ Burton 2011, p. 117.
  2. ^ Heath 2002.
  3. ^ Katz 2009, pp. 201–204.
  4. ^ Katz 2009, pp. 284–285.
  5. ^ Katz 2009, pp. 305–306.
  6. ^ Katz 2009, pp. 516–517.
  7. ^ Struik 1986, pp. 215–216.
  8. ^ Katz 2009, pp. 536–537.
  9. ^ Burton 2011, pp. 385–386.
  10. ^ Stillwell 1989, p. 131.
  11. ^ Katz 2009, pp. 628–629.
  12. ^ Katz 2009, p. 785.
  13. ^ Burton 2011, p. 414; Leibniz 1899, p. 154.
  14. ^ Cajori 1929, pp. 249–250; Fourier 1822, §231.
  15. ^ Cajori 1929, p. 246.
  16. ^ Cajori 1929, p. 182.
  17. ^ a b Apostol 1967, p. 74.
  18. ^ Anton, Bivens & Davis 2016, p. 259.
  19. ^ Apostol 1967, p. 69.
  20. ^ Anton, Bivens & Davis 2016, pp. 286−287.
  21. ^ Krantz 1991, p. 173.
  22. ^ Rudin 1987, p. 5.
  23. ^ Siegmund-Schultze 2008, p. 796.
  24. ^ Folland 1999, pp. 57–58.
  25. ^ Bourbaki 2004, p. IV.43.
  26. ^ Lieb & Loss 2001, p. 14.
  27. ^ Folland 1999, p. 53.
  28. ^ a b Rudin 1987, p. 25.
  29. ^ a b Apostol 1967, p. 80.
  30. ^ Rudin 1987, p. 54.
  31. ^ Apostol 1967, p. 81.
  32. ^ a b Rudin 1987, p. 63.
  33. ^ Apostol 1967, p. 202.
  34. ^ Apostol 1967, p. 205.
  35. ^ Montesinos, Zizler & Zizler 2015, p. 355.
  36. ^ Apostol 1967, p. 416.
  37. ^ Apostol 1967, p. 418.
  38. ^ Anton, Bivens & Davis 2016, p. 895.
  39. ^ a b Anton, Bivens & Davis 2016, p. 896.
  40. ^ Anton, Bivens & Davis 2016, p. 897.
  41. ^ Anton, Bivens & Davis 2016, p. 980.
  42. ^ Anton, Bivens & Davis 2016, p. 981.
  43. ^ Anton, Bivens & Davis 2016, p. 697.
  44. ^ Anton, Bivens & Davis 2016, p. 991.
  45. ^ Anton, Bivens & Davis 2016, p. 1014.
  46. ^ Anton, Bivens & Davis 2016, p. 1024.
  47. ^ Feller 1966, p. 1.
  48. ^ Feller 1966, p. 3.
  49. ^ Apostol 1967, pp. 88–89.
  50. ^ Apostol 1967, pp. 111–114.
  51. ^ Anton, Bivens & Davis 2016, p. 306.
  52. ^ Apostol 1967, p. 116.
  53. ^ Rich, Scheibe & Abbasi 2018.
  54. ^ Gonzalez, Jiu & Moll 2020.
  55. ^ Dahlquist & Björck 2008, pp. 519–520.
  56. ^ Dahlquist & Björck 2008, pp. 522–524.
  57. ^ Kahaner, Moler & Nash 1989, p. 144.
  58. ^ Kahaner, Moler & Nash 1989, p. 147.
  59. ^ Kahaner, Moler & Nash 1989, pp. 139–140.
  60. ^ Kempf, Jackson & Morales 2015.

Bibliography edit

  • Anton, Howard; Bivens, Irl C.; Davis, Stephen (2016), Calculus: Early Transcendentals (11th ed.), John Wiley & Sons, ISBN 978-1-118-88382-2
  • Apostol, Tom M. (1967), Calculus, Vol. 1: One-Variable Calculus with an Introduction to Linear Algebra (2nd ed.), Wiley, ISBN 978-0-471-00005-1
  • Bourbaki, Nicolas (2004), Integration I, Springer-Verlag, ISBN 3-540-41129-1. In particular chapters III and IV.
  • Burton, David M. (2011), The History of Mathematics: An Introduction (7th ed.), McGraw-Hill, ISBN 978-0-07-338315-6
  • Cajori, Florian (1929), A History Of Mathematical Notations Volume II, Open Court Publishing, ISBN 978-0-486-67766-8
  • Dahlquist, Germund; Björck, Åke (2008), , Numerical Methods in Scientific Computing, Volume I, Philadelphia: SIAM, archived from the original on 2007-06-15
  • Feller, William (1966), An introduction to probability theory and its applications, John Wiley & Sons
  • Folland, Gerald B. (1999), Real Analysis: Modern Techniques and Their Applications (2nd ed.), John Wiley & Sons, ISBN 0-471-31716-0
  • Fourier, Jean Baptiste Joseph (1822), Théorie analytique de la chaleur, Chez Firmin Didot, père et fils, p. §231
    Available in translation as Fourier, Joseph (1878), The analytical theory of heat, Freeman, Alexander (trans.), Cambridge University Press, pp. 200–201
  • Gonzalez, Ivan; Jiu, Lin; Moll, Victor H. (1 January 2020), "An extension of the method of brackets. Part 2", Open Mathematics, 18 (1): 983–995, arXiv:1707.08942, doi:10.1515/math-2020-0062, ISSN 2391-5455, S2CID 222004668
  • Heath, T. L., ed. (2002), The Works of Archimedes, Dover, ISBN 978-0-486-42084-4
    (Originally published by Cambridge University Press, 1897, based on J. L. Heiberg's Greek version.)
  • Hildebrandt, T. H. (1953), "Integration in abstract spaces", Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society, 59 (2): 111–139, doi:10.1090/S0002-9904-1953-09694-X, ISSN 0273-0979
  • Kahaner, David; Moler, Cleve; Nash, Stephen (1989), "Chapter 5: Numerical Quadrature", Numerical Methods and Software, Prentice Hall, ISBN 978-0-13-627258-8
  • Kallio, Bruce Victor (1966), (PDF) (M.A. thesis), University of British Columbia, archived from the original on 2014-03-05, retrieved 2014-02-28
  • Katz, Victor J. (2009), A History of Mathematics: An Introduction, Addison-Wesley, ISBN 978-0-321-38700-4
  • Kempf, Achim; Jackson, David M.; Morales, Alejandro H. (2015), "How to (path-)integrate by differentiating", Journal of Physics: Conference Series, IOP Publishing, 626 (1): 012015, arXiv:1507.04348, Bibcode:2015JPhCS.626a2015K, doi:10.1088/1742-6596/626/1/012015, S2CID 119642596
  • Krantz, Steven G. (1991), Real Analysis and Foundations, CRC Press, ISBN 0-8493-7156-2
  • Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm (1899), Gerhardt, Karl Immanuel (ed.), Der Briefwechsel von Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz mit Mathematikern. Erster Band, Berlin: Mayer & Müller
  • Lieb, Elliott; Loss, Michael (2001), Analysis, Graduate Studies in Mathematics, vol. 14 (2nd ed.), American Mathematical Society, ISBN 978-0821827833
  • Montesinos, Vicente; Zizler, Peter; Zizler, Václav (2015), An Introduction to Modern Analysis (illustrated ed.), Springer, ISBN 978-3-319-12481-0
  • Rich, Albert; Scheibe, Patrick; Abbasi, Nasser (16 December 2018), "Rule-based integration: An extensive system of symbolic integration rules", Journal of Open Source Software, 3 (32): 1073, Bibcode:2018JOSS....3.1073R, doi:10.21105/joss.01073, S2CID 56487062
  • Rudin, Walter (1987), "Chapter 1: Abstract Integration", Real and Complex Analysis (International ed.), McGraw-Hill, ISBN 978-0-07-100276-9
  • Saks, Stanisław (1964), Theory of the integral (English translation by L. C. Young. With two additional notes by Stefan Banach. Second revised ed.), New York: Dover
  • Siegmund-Schultze, Reinhard (2008), "Henri Lebesgue", in Timothy Gowers; June Barrow-Green; Imre Leader (eds.), Princeton Companion to Mathematics, Princeton University Press, ISBN 978-0-691-11880-2.
  • Stillwell, John (1989), Mathematics and Its History, Springer, ISBN 0-387-96981-0
  • Stoer, Josef; Bulirsch, Roland (2002), "Topics in Integration", Introduction to Numerical Analysis (3rd ed.), Springer, ISBN 978-0-387-95452-3.
  • Struik, Dirk Jan, ed. (1986), A Source Book in Mathematics, 1200-1800, Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, ISBN 0-691-08404-1
  • W3C (2006), Arabic mathematical notation{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)

External links edit

Online books edit

  • Keisler, H. Jerome, Elementary Calculus: An Approach Using Infinitesimals, University of Wisconsin
  • Stroyan, K. D., , University of Iowa
  • Mauch, Sean, , CIT, an online textbook that includes a complete introduction to calculus
  • Crowell, Benjamin, Calculus, Fullerton College, an online textbook
  • Garrett, Paul, Notes on First-Year Calculus
  • Hussain, Faraz, Understanding Calculus, an online textbook
  • Johnson, William Woolsey (1909) Elementary Treatise on Integral Calculus, link from HathiTrust.
  • Kowalk, W. P., Integration Theory, University of Oldenburg. A new concept to an old problem. Online textbook
  • Sloughter, Dan, Difference Equations to Differential Equations, an introduction to calculus
  • Numerical Methods of Integration at Holistic Numerical Methods Institute
  • P. S. Wang, (1972) — a cookbook of definite integral techniques

integral, this, article, about, concept, definite, integrals, calculus, indefinite, integral, antiderivative, numbers, integer, other, uses, disambiguation, area, under, curve, redirects, here, pharmacology, integral, area, under, curve, pharmacokinetics, stat. This article is about the concept of definite integrals in calculus For the indefinite integral see antiderivative For the set of numbers see integer For other uses see Integral disambiguation Area under the curve redirects here For the pharmacology integral see Area under the curve pharmacokinetics For the statistics concept see Receiver operating characteristic Area under the curve In mathematics an integral is the continuous analog of a sum which is used to calculate areas volumes and their generalizations Integration the process of computing an integral is one of the two fundamental operations of calculus a the other being differentiation Integration started as a method to solve problems in mathematics and physics such as finding the area under a curve or determining displacement from velocity Today integration is used in a wide variety of scientific fields A definite integral of a function can be represented as the signed area of the region bounded by its graph and the horizontal axis in the above graph as an example the integral of f x displaystyle f x is the yellow area subtracted from the blue areaThe integrals depicted here are called definite integrals which can be interpreted as the signed area of the region in the plane that is bounded by the graph of a given function between two points in the real line Conventionally areas above the horizontal axis of the plane are positive while areas below are negative Integrals also refer to the concept of an antiderivative a function whose derivative is the given function in this case they are also called indefinite integrals The fundamental theorem of calculus relates definite integration to differentiation and provides a method to compute the definite integral of a function when its antiderivative is known differentiation and integration are inverse operations Although methods of calculating areas and volumes dated from ancient Greek mathematics the principles of integration were formulated independently by Isaac Newton and Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz in the late 17th century who thought of the area under a curve as an infinite sum of rectangles of infinitesimal width Bernhard Riemann later gave a rigorous definition of integrals which is based on a limiting procedure that approximates the area of a curvilinear region by breaking the region into infinitesimally thin vertical slabs In the early 20th century Henri Lebesgue generalized Riemann s formulation by introducing what is now referred to as the Lebesgue integral it is more general than Riemann s in the sense that a wider class of functions are Lebesgue integrable Integrals may be generalized depending on the type of the function as well as the domain over which the integration is performed For example a line integral is defined for functions of two or more variables and the interval of integration is replaced by a curve connecting two points in space In a surface integral the curve is replaced by a piece of a surface in three dimensional space Contents 1 History 1 1 Pre calculus integration 1 2 Leibniz and Newton 1 3 Formalization 1 4 Historical notation 1 5 First use of the term 2 Terminology and notation 3 Interpretations 4 Formal definitions 4 1 Riemann integral 4 2 Lebesgue integral 4 3 Other integrals 5 Properties 5 1 Linearity 5 2 Inequalities 5 3 Conventions 6 Fundamental theorem of calculus 6 1 First theorem 6 2 Second theorem 7 Extensions 7 1 Improper integrals 7 2 Multiple integration 7 3 Line integrals and surface integrals 7 4 Contour integrals 7 5 Integrals of differential forms 7 6 Summations 7 7 Functional integrals 8 Applications 9 Computation 9 1 Analytical 9 2 Symbolic 9 3 Numerical 9 4 Mechanical 9 5 Geometrical 9 6 Integration by differentiation 10 Examples 10 1 Using the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 Bibliography 15 External links 15 1 Online booksHistory editSee also History of calculus Pre calculus integration edit The first documented systematic technique capable of determining integrals is the method of exhaustion of the ancient Greek astronomer Eudoxus ca 370 BC which sought to find areas and volumes by breaking them up into an infinite number of divisions for which the area or volume was known 1 This method was further developed and employed by Archimedes in the 3rd century BC and used to calculate the area of a circle the surface area and volume of a sphere area of an ellipse the area under a parabola the volume of a segment of a paraboloid of revolution the volume of a segment of a hyperboloid of revolution and the area of a spiral 2 A similar method was independently developed in China around the 3rd century AD by Liu Hui who used it to find the area of the circle This method was later used in the 5th century by Chinese father and son mathematicians Zu Chongzhi and Zu Geng to find the volume of a sphere 3 In the Middle East Hasan Ibn al Haytham Latinized as Alhazen c 965 c 1040 AD derived a formula for the sum of fourth powers 4 He used the results to carry out what would now be called an integration of this function where the formulae for the sums of integral squares and fourth powers allowed him to calculate the volume of a paraboloid 5 The next significant advances in integral calculus did not begin to appear until the 17th century At this time the work of Cavalieri with his method of indivisibles and work by Fermat began to lay the foundations of modern calculus 6 with Cavalieri computing the integrals of xn up to degree n 9 in Cavalieri s quadrature formula 7 The case n 1 required the invention of a function the hyperbolic logarithm achieved by quadrature of the hyperbola in 1647 Further steps were made in the early 17th century by Barrow and Torricelli who provided the first hints of a connection between integration and differentiation Barrow provided the first proof of the fundamental theorem of calculus 8 Wallis generalized Cavalieri s method computing integrals of x to a general power including negative powers and fractional powers 9 Leibniz and Newton edit The major advance in integration came in the 17th century with the independent discovery of the fundamental theorem of calculus by Leibniz and Newton 10 The theorem demonstrates a connection between integration and differentiation This connection combined with the comparative ease of differentiation can be exploited to calculate integrals In particular the fundamental theorem of calculus allows one to solve a much broader class of problems Equal in importance is the comprehensive mathematical framework that both Leibniz and Newton developed Given the name infinitesimal calculus it allowed for precise analysis of functions with continuous domains This framework eventually became modern calculus whose notation for integrals is drawn directly from the work of Leibniz Formalization edit While Newton and Leibniz provided a systematic approach to integration their work lacked a degree of rigour Bishop Berkeley memorably attacked the vanishing increments used by Newton calling them ghosts of departed quantities 11 Calculus acquired a firmer footing with the development of limits Integration was first rigorously formalized using limits by Riemann 12 Although all bounded piecewise continuous functions are Riemann integrable on a bounded interval subsequently more general functions were considered particularly in the context of Fourier analysis to which Riemann s definition does not apply and Lebesgue formulated a different definition of integral founded in measure theory a subfield of real analysis Other definitions of integral extending Riemann s and Lebesgue s approaches were proposed These approaches based on the real number system are the ones most common today but alternative approaches exist such as a definition of integral as the standard part of an infinite Riemann sum based on the hyperreal number system Historical notation edit The notation for the indefinite integral was introduced by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz in 1675 13 He adapted the integral symbol from the letter ſ long s standing for summa written as ſumma Latin for sum or total The modern notation for the definite integral with limits above and below the integral sign was first used by Joseph Fourier in Memoires of the French Academy around 1819 1820 reprinted in his book of 1822 14 Isaac Newton used a small vertical bar above a variable to indicate integration or placed the variable inside a box The vertical bar was easily confused with x or x which are used to indicate differentiation and the box notation was difficult for printers to reproduce so these notations were not widely adopted 15 First use of the term edit The term was first printed in Latin by Jacob Bernoulli in 1690 Ergo et horum Integralia aequantur 16 Terminology and notation editIn general the integral of a real valued function f x with respect to a real variable x on an interval a b is written as a b f x d x displaystyle int a b f x dx nbsp The integral sign represents integration The symbol dx called the differential of the variable x indicates that the variable of integration is x The function f x is called the integrand the points a and b are called the limits or bounds of integration and the integral is said to be over the interval a b called the interval of integration 17 A function is said to be integrable if its integral over its domain is finite If limits are specified the integral is called a definite integral When the limits are omitted as in f x d x displaystyle int f x dx nbsp the integral is called an indefinite integral which represents a class of functions the antiderivative whose derivative is the integrand 18 The fundamental theorem of calculus relates the evaluation of definite integrals to indefinite integrals There are several extensions of the notation for integrals to encompass integration on unbounded domains and or in multiple dimensions see later sections of this article In advanced settings it is not uncommon to leave out dx when only the simple Riemann integral is being used or the exact type of integral is immaterial For instance one might write a b c 1 f c 2 g c 1 a b f c 2 a b g textstyle int a b c 1 f c 2 g c 1 int a b f c 2 int a b g nbsp to express the linearity of the integral a property shared by the Riemann integral and all generalizations thereof 19 Interpretations edit nbsp Approximations to integral of x from 0 to 1 with 5 yellow right endpoint partitions and 10 green left endpoint partitionsIntegrals appear in many practical situations For instance from the length width and depth of a swimming pool which is rectangular with a flat bottom one can determine the volume of water it can contain the area of its surface and the length of its edge But if it is oval with a rounded bottom integrals are required to find exact and rigorous values for these quantities In each case one may divide the sought quantity into infinitely many infinitesimal pieces then sum the pieces to achieve an accurate approximation As another example to find the area of the region bounded by the graph of the function f x x textstyle sqrt x nbsp between x 0 and x 1 one can divide the interval into five pieces 0 1 5 2 5 1 then construct rectangle2 using the right end height of each piece thus 0 1 5 2 5 1 and sum their areas to get the approximation 1 5 1 5 0 2 5 2 5 1 5 5 5 5 5 4 5 0 7497 displaystyle textstyle sqrt frac 1 5 left frac 1 5 0 right sqrt frac 2 5 left frac 2 5 frac 1 5 right cdots sqrt frac 5 5 left frac 5 5 frac 4 5 right approx 0 7497 nbsp which is larger than the exact value Alternatively when replacing these subintervals by ones with the left end height of each piece the approximation one gets is too low with twelve such subintervals the approximated area is only 0 6203 However when the number of pieces increases to infinity it will reach a limit which is the exact value of the area sought in this case 2 3 One writes 0 1 x d x 2 3 displaystyle int 0 1 sqrt x dx frac 2 3 nbsp which means 2 3 is the result of a weighted sum of function values x multiplied by the infinitesimal step widths denoted by dx on the interval 0 1 Darboux sums nbsp Darboux upper sums of the function y x2 nbsp Darboux lower sums of the function y x2Formal definitions edit nbsp Riemann sums convergingThere are many ways of formally defining an integral not all of which are equivalent The differences exist mostly to deal with differing special cases which may not be integrable under other definitions but are also occasionally for pedagogical reasons The most commonly used definitions are Riemann integrals and Lebesgue integrals Riemann integral edit Main article Riemann integral The Riemann integral is defined in terms of Riemann sums of functions with respect to tagged partitions of an interval 20 A tagged partition of a closed interval a b on the real line is a finite sequence a x 0 t 1 x 1 t 2 x 2 x n 1 t n x n b displaystyle a x 0 leq t 1 leq x 1 leq t 2 leq x 2 leq cdots leq x n 1 leq t n leq x n b nbsp This partitions the interval a b into n sub intervals xi 1 xi indexed by i each of which is tagged with a specific point ti xi 1 xi A Riemann sum of a function f with respect to such a tagged partition is defined as i 1 n f t i D i displaystyle sum i 1 n f t i Delta i nbsp thus each term of the sum is the area of a rectangle with height equal to the function value at the chosen point of the given sub interval and width the same as the width of sub interval Di xi xi 1 The mesh of such a tagged partition is the width of the largest sub interval formed by the partition maxi 1 n Di The Riemann integral of a function f over the interval a b is equal to S if 21 For all e gt 0 displaystyle varepsilon gt 0 nbsp there exists d gt 0 displaystyle delta gt 0 nbsp such that for any tagged partition a b displaystyle a b nbsp with mesh less than d displaystyle delta nbsp S i 1 n f t i D i lt e displaystyle left S sum i 1 n f t i Delta i right lt varepsilon nbsp When the chosen tags are the maximum respectively minimum value of the function in each interval the Riemann sum becomes an upper respectively lower Darboux sum suggesting the close connection between the Riemann integral and the Darboux integral Lebesgue integral edit Main article Lebesgue integration nbsp Lebesgue integrationIt is often of interest both in theory and applications to be able to pass to the limit under the integral For instance a sequence of functions can frequently be constructed that approximate in a suitable sense the solution to a problem Then the integral of the solution function should be the limit of the integrals of the approximations However many functions that can be obtained as limits are not Riemann integrable and so such limit theorems do not hold with the Riemann integral Therefore it is of great importance to have a definition of the integral that allows a wider class of functions to be integrated 22 Such an integral is the Lebesgue integral that exploits the following fact to enlarge the class of integrable functions if the values of a function are rearranged over the domain the integral of a function should remain the same Thus Henri Lebesgue introduced the integral bearing his name explaining this integral thus in a letter to Paul Montel 23 I have to pay a certain sum which I have collected in my pocket I take the bills and coins out of my pocket and give them to the creditor in the order I find them until I have reached the total sum This is the Riemann integral But I can proceed differently After I have taken all the money out of my pocket I order the bills and coins according to identical values and then I pay the several heaps one after the other to the creditor This is my integral As Folland puts it To compute the Riemann integral of f one partitions the domain a b into subintervals while in the Lebesgue integral one is in effect partitioning the range of f 24 The definition of the Lebesgue integral thus begins with a measure m In the simplest case the Lebesgue measure m A of an interval A a b is its width b a so that the Lebesgue integral agrees with the proper Riemann integral when both exist 25 In more complicated cases the sets being measured can be highly fragmented with no continuity and no resemblance to intervals Using the partitioning the range of f philosophy the integral of a non negative function f R R should be the sum over t of the areas between a thin horizontal strip between y t and y t dt This area is just m x f x gt t dt Let f t m x f x gt t The Lebesgue integral of f is then defined by f 0 f t d t displaystyle int f int 0 infty f t dt nbsp where the integral on the right is an ordinary improper Riemann integral f is a strictly decreasing positive function and therefore has a well defined improper Riemann integral 26 For a suitable class of functions the measurable functions this defines the Lebesgue integral A general measurable function f is Lebesgue integrable if the sum of the absolute values of the areas of the regions between the graph of f and the x axis is finite 27 E f d m lt displaystyle int E f d mu lt infty nbsp In that case the integral is as in the Riemannian case the difference between the area above the x axis and the area below the x axis 28 E f d m E f d m E f d m displaystyle int E f d mu int E f d mu int E f d mu nbsp where f x max f x 0 f x if f x gt 0 0 otherwise f x max f x 0 f x if f x lt 0 0 otherwise displaystyle begin alignedat 3 amp f x amp amp max f x 0 amp amp begin cases f x amp text if f x gt 0 0 amp text otherwise end cases amp f x amp amp max f x 0 amp amp begin cases f x amp text if f x lt 0 0 amp text otherwise end cases end alignedat nbsp Other integrals edit Although the Riemann and Lebesgue integrals are the most widely used definitions of the integral a number of others exist including The Darboux integral which is defined by Darboux sums restricted Riemann sums yet is equivalent to the Riemann integral A function is Darboux integrable if and only if it is Riemann integrable Darboux integrals have the advantage of being easier to define than Riemann integrals The Riemann Stieltjes integral an extension of the Riemann integral which integrates with respect to a function as opposed to a variable The Lebesgue Stieltjes integral further developed by Johann Radon which generalizes both the Riemann Stieltjes and Lebesgue integrals The Daniell integral which subsumes the Lebesgue integral and Lebesgue Stieltjes integral without depending on measures The Haar integral used for integration on locally compact topological groups introduced by Alfred Haar in 1933 The Henstock Kurzweil integral variously defined by Arnaud Denjoy Oskar Perron and most elegantly as the gauge integral Jaroslav Kurzweil and developed by Ralph Henstock The Ito integral and Stratonovich integral which define integration with respect to semimartingales such as Brownian motion The Young integral which is a kind of Riemann Stieltjes integral with respect to certain functions of unbounded variation The rough path integral which is defined for functions equipped with some additional rough path structure and generalizes stochastic integration against both semimartingales and processes such as the fractional Brownian motion The Choquet integral a subadditive or superadditive integral created by the French mathematician Gustave Choquet in 1953 The Bochner integral an extension of the Lebesgue integral to a more general class of functions namely those with a domain that is a Banach space Properties editLinearity edit The collection of Riemann integrable functions on a closed interval a b forms a vector space under the operations of pointwise addition and multiplication by a scalar and the operation of integration f a b f x d x displaystyle f mapsto int a b f x dx nbsp is a linear functional on this vector space Thus the collection of integrable functions is closed under taking linear combinations and the integral of a linear combination is the linear combination of the integrals 29 a b a f b g x d x a a b f x d x b a b g x d x displaystyle int a b alpha f beta g x dx alpha int a b f x dx beta int a b g x dx nbsp Similarly the set of real valued Lebesgue integrable functions on a given measure space E with measure m is closed under taking linear combinations and hence form a vector space and the Lebesgue integral f E f d m displaystyle f mapsto int E f d mu nbsp is a linear functional on this vector space so that 28 E a f b g d m a E f d m b E g d m displaystyle int E alpha f beta g d mu alpha int E f d mu beta int E g d mu nbsp More generally consider the vector space of all measurable functions on a measure space E m taking values in a locally compact complete topological vector space V over a locally compact topological field K f E V Then one may define an abstract integration map assigning to each function f an element of V or the symbol f E f d m displaystyle f mapsto int E f d mu nbsp that is compatible with linear combinations 30 In this situation the linearity holds for the subspace of functions whose integral is an element of V i e finite The most important special cases arise when K is R C or a finite extension of the field Qp of p adic numbers and V is a finite dimensional vector space over K and when K C and V is a complex Hilbert space Linearity together with some natural continuity properties and normalization for a certain class of simple functions may be used to give an alternative definition of the integral This is the approach of Daniell for the case of real valued functions on a set X generalized by Nicolas Bourbaki to functions with values in a locally compact topological vector space See Hildebrandt 1953 for an axiomatic characterization of the integral Inequalities edit A number of general inequalities hold for Riemann integrable functions defined on a closed and bounded interval a b and can be generalized to other notions of integral Lebesgue and Daniell Upper and lower bounds An integrable function f on a b is necessarily bounded on that interval Thus there are real numbers m and M so that m f x M for all x in a b Since the lower and upper sums of f over a b are therefore bounded by respectively m b a and M b a it follows that m b a a b f x d x M b a displaystyle m b a leq int a b f x dx leq M b a nbsp Inequalities between functions 31 If f x g x for each x in a b then each of the upper and lower sums of f is bounded above by the upper and lower sums respectively of g Thus a b f x d x a b g x d x displaystyle int a b f x dx leq int a b g x dx nbsp This is a generalization of the above inequalities as M b a is the integral of the constant function with value M over a b In addition if the inequality between functions is strict then the inequality between integrals is also strict That is if f x lt g x for each x in a b then a b f x d x lt a b g x d x displaystyle int a b f x dx lt int a b g x dx nbsp Subintervals If c d is a subinterval of a b and f x is non negative for all x then c d f x d x a b f x d x displaystyle int c d f x dx leq int a b f x dx nbsp Products and absolute values of functions If f and g are two functions then we may consider their pointwise products and powers and absolute values f g x f x g x f 2 x f x 2 f x f x displaystyle fg x f x g x f 2 x f x 2 f x f x nbsp If f is Riemann integrable on a b then the same is true for f and a b f x d x a b f x d x displaystyle left int a b f x dx right leq int a b f x dx nbsp Moreover if f and g are both Riemann integrable then fg is also Riemann integrable and a b f g x d x 2 a b f x 2 d x a b g x 2 d x displaystyle left int a b fg x dx right 2 leq left int a b f x 2 dx right left int a b g x 2 dx right nbsp This inequality known as the Cauchy Schwarz inequality plays a prominent role in Hilbert space theory where the left hand side is interpreted as the inner product of two square integrable functions f and g on the interval a b Holder s inequality 32 Suppose that p and q are two real numbers 1 p q with 1 p 1 q 1 and f and g are two Riemann integrable functions Then the functions f p and g q are also integrable and the following Holder s inequality holds f x g x d x f x p d x 1 p g x q d x 1 q displaystyle left int f x g x dx right leq left int left f x right p dx right 1 p left int left g x right q dx right 1 q nbsp For p q 2 Holder s inequality becomes the Cauchy Schwarz inequality Minkowski inequality 32 Suppose that p 1 is a real number and f and g are Riemann integrable functions Then f p g p and f g p are also Riemann integrable and the following Minkowski inequality holds f x g x p d x 1 p f x p d x 1 p g x p d x 1 p displaystyle left int left f x g x right p dx right 1 p leq left int left f x right p dx right 1 p left int left g x right p dx right 1 p nbsp An analogue of this inequality for Lebesgue integral is used in construction of Lp spaces Conventions edit In this section f is a real valued Riemann integrable function The integral a b f x d x displaystyle int a b f x dx nbsp over an interval a b is defined if a lt b This means that the upper and lower sums of the function f are evaluated on a partition a x0 x1 xn b whose values xi are increasing Geometrically this signifies that integration takes place left to right evaluating f within intervals x i x i 1 where an interval with a higher index lies to the right of one with a lower index The values a and b the end points of the interval are called the limits of integration of f Integrals can also be defined if a gt b 17 a b f x d x b a f x d x displaystyle int a b f x dx int b a f x dx nbsp With a b this implies a a f x d x 0 displaystyle int a a f x dx 0 nbsp The first convention is necessary in consideration of taking integrals over subintervals of a b the second says that an integral taken over a degenerate interval or a point should be zero One reason for the first convention is that the integrability of f on an interval a b implies that f is integrable on any subinterval c d but in particular integrals have the property that if c is any element of a b then 29 a b f x d x a c f x d x c b f x d x displaystyle int a b f x dx int a c f x dx int c b f x dx nbsp With the first convention the resulting relation a c f x d x a b f x d x c b f x d x a b f x d x b c f x d x displaystyle begin aligned int a c f x dx amp int a b f x dx int c b f x dx amp int a b f x dx int b c f x dx end aligned nbsp is then well defined for any cyclic permutation of a b and c Fundamental theorem of calculus editMain article Fundamental theorem of calculus The fundamental theorem of calculus is the statement that differentiation and integration are inverse operations if a continuous function is first integrated and then differentiated the original function is retrieved 33 An important consequence sometimes called the second fundamental theorem of calculus allows one to compute integrals by using an antiderivative of the function to be integrated 34 First theorem edit Let f be a continuous real valued function defined on a closed interval a b Let F be the function defined for all x in a b by 35 F x a x f t d t displaystyle F x int a x f t dt nbsp Then F is continuous on a b differentiable on the open interval a b and F x f x displaystyle F x f x nbsp for all x in a b Second theorem edit Let f be a real valued function defined on a closed interval a b that admits an antiderivative F on a b That is f and F are functions such that for all x in a b f x F x displaystyle f x F x nbsp If f is integrable on a b then a b f x d x F b F a displaystyle int a b f x dx F b F a nbsp Extensions editImproper integrals edit Main article Improper integral nbsp The improper integral 0 d x x 1 x p displaystyle int 0 infty frac dx x 1 sqrt x pi nbsp has unbounded intervals for both domain and range A proper Riemann integral assumes the integrand is defined and finite on a closed and bounded interval bracketed by the limits of integration An improper integral occurs when one or more of these conditions is not satisfied In some cases such integrals may be defined by considering the limit of a sequence of proper Riemann integrals on progressively larger intervals If the interval is unbounded for instance at its upper end then the improper integral is the limit as that endpoint goes to infinity 36 a f x d x lim b a b f x d x displaystyle int a infty f x dx lim b to infty int a b f x dx nbsp If the integrand is only defined or finite on a half open interval for instance a b then again a limit may provide a finite result 37 a b f x d x lim e 0 a ϵ b f x d x displaystyle int a b f x dx lim varepsilon to 0 int a epsilon b f x dx nbsp That is the improper integral is the limit of proper integrals as one endpoint of the interval of integration approaches either a specified real number or or In more complicated cases limits are required at both endpoints or at interior points Multiple integration edit Main article Multiple integral nbsp Double integral computes volume under a surface z f x y displaystyle z f x y nbsp Just as the definite integral of a positive function of one variable represents the area of the region between the graph of the function and the x axis the double integral of a positive function of two variables represents the volume of the region between the surface defined by the function and the plane that contains its domain 38 For example a function in two dimensions depends on two real variables x and y and the integral of a function f over the rectangle R given as the Cartesian product of two intervals R a b c d displaystyle R a b times c d nbsp can be written R f x y d A displaystyle int R f x y dA nbsp where the differential dA indicates that integration is taken with respect to area This double integral can be defined using Riemann sums and represents the signed volume under the graph of z f x y over the domain R 39 Under suitable conditions e g if f is continuous Fubini s theorem states that this integral can be expressed as an equivalent iterated integral 40 a b c d f x y d y d x displaystyle int a b left int c d f x y dy right dx nbsp This reduces the problem of computing a double integral to computing one dimensional integrals Because of this another notation for the integral over R uses a double integral sign 39 R f x y d A displaystyle iint R f x y dA nbsp Integration over more general domains is possible The integral of a function f with respect to volume over an n dimensional region D of R n displaystyle mathbb R n nbsp is denoted by symbols such as D f x d n x D f d V displaystyle int D f mathbf x d n mathbf x int D f dV nbsp Line integrals and surface integrals edit Main articles Line integral and Surface integral nbsp A line integral sums together elements along a curve The concept of an integral can be extended to more general domains of integration such as curved lines and surfaces inside higher dimensional spaces Such integrals are known as line integrals and surface integrals respectively These have important applications in physics as when dealing with vector fields A line integral sometimes called a path integral is an integral where the function to be integrated is evaluated along a curve 41 Various different line integrals are in use In the case of a closed curve it is also called a contour integral The function to be integrated may be a scalar field or a vector field The value of the line integral is the sum of values of the field at all points on the curve weighted by some scalar function on the curve commonly arc length or for a vector field the scalar product of the vector field with a differential vector in the curve 42 This weighting distinguishes the line integral from simpler integrals defined on intervals Many simple formulas in physics have natural continuous analogs in terms of line integrals for example the fact that work is equal to force F multiplied by displacement s may be expressed in terms of vector quantities as 43 W F s displaystyle W mathbf F cdot mathbf s nbsp For an object moving along a path C in a vector field F such as an electric field or gravitational field the total work done by the field on the object is obtained by summing up the differential work done in moving from s to s ds This gives the line integral 44 W C F d s displaystyle W int C mathbf F cdot d mathbf s nbsp nbsp The definition of surface integral relies on splitting the surface into small surface elements A surface integral generalizes double integrals to integration over a surface which may be a curved set in space it can be thought of as the double integral analog of the line integral The function to be integrated may be a scalar field or a vector field The value of the surface integral is the sum of the field at all points on the surface This can be achieved by splitting the surface into surface elements which provide the partitioning for Riemann sums 45 For an example of applications of surface integrals consider a vector field v on a surface S that is for each point x in S v x is a vector Imagine that a fluid flows through S such that v x determines the velocity of the fluid at x The flux is defined as the quantity of fluid flowing through S in unit amount of time To find the flux one need to take the dot product of v with the unit surface normal to S at each point which will give a scalar field which is integrated over the surface 46 S v d S displaystyle int S mathbf v cdot d mathbf S nbsp The fluid flux in this example may be from a physical fluid such as water or air or from electrical or magnetic flux Thus surface integrals have applications in physics particularly with the classical theory of electromagnetism Contour integrals edit Main article Contour integration In complex analysis the integrand is a complex valued function of a complex variable z instead of a real function of a real variable x When a complex function is integrated along a curve g displaystyle gamma nbsp in the complex plane the integral is denoted as follows g f z d z displaystyle int gamma f z dz nbsp This is known as a contour integral Integrals of differential forms edit Main article Differential form See also Volume form and Density on a manifold A differential form is a mathematical concept in the fields of multivariable calculus differential topology and tensors Differential forms are organized by degree For example a one form is a weighted sum of the differentials of the coordinates such as E x y z d x F x y z d y G x y z d z displaystyle E x y z dx F x y z dy G x y z dz nbsp where E F G are functions in three dimensions A differential one form can be integrated over an oriented path and the resulting integral is just another way of writing a line integral Here the basic differentials dx dy dz measure infinitesimal oriented lengths parallel to the three coordinate axes A differential two form is a sum of the form G x y z d x d y E x y z d y d z F x y z d z d x displaystyle G x y z dx wedge dy E x y z dy wedge dz F x y z dz wedge dx nbsp Here the basic two forms d x d y d z d x d y d z displaystyle dx wedge dy dz wedge dx dy wedge dz nbsp measure oriented areas parallel to the coordinate two planes The symbol displaystyle wedge nbsp denotes the wedge product which is similar to the cross product in the sense that the wedge product of two forms representing oriented lengths represents an oriented area A two form can be integrated over an oriented surface and the resulting integral is equivalent to the surface integral giving the flux of E i F j G k displaystyle E mathbf i F mathbf j G mathbf k nbsp Unlike the cross product and the three dimensional vector calculus the wedge product and the calculus of differential forms makes sense in arbitrary dimension and on more general manifolds curves surfaces and their higher dimensional analogs The exterior derivative plays the role of the gradient and curl of vector calculus and Stokes theorem simultaneously generalizes the three theorems of vector calculus the divergence theorem Green s theorem and the Kelvin Stokes theorem Summations edit Main article Summation Approximation by definite integrals The discrete equivalent of integration is summation Summations and integrals can be put on the same foundations using the theory of Lebesgue integrals or time scale calculus Functional integrals edit Main article Functional integration An integration that is performed not over a variable or in physics over a space or time dimension but over a space of functions is referred to as a functional integral Applications editIntegrals are used extensively in many areas For example in probability theory integrals are used to determine the probability of some random variable falling within a certain range 47 Moreover the integral under an entire probability density function must equal 1 which provides a test of whether a function with no negative values could be a density function or not 48 Integrals can be used for computing the area of a two dimensional region that has a curved boundary as well as computing the volume of a three dimensional object that has a curved boundary The area of a two dimensional region can be calculated using the aforementioned definite integral 49 The volume of a three dimensional object such as a disc or washer can be computed by disc integration using the equation for the volume of a cylinder p r 2 h displaystyle pi r 2 h nbsp where r displaystyle r nbsp is the radius In the case of a simple disc created by rotating a curve about the x axis the radius is given by f x and its height is the differential dx Using an integral with bounds a and b the volume of the disc is equal to 50 p a b f 2 x d x displaystyle pi int a b f 2 x dx nbsp Integrals are also used in physics in areas like kinematics to find quantities like displacement time and velocity For example in rectilinear motion the displacement of an object over the time interval a b displaystyle a b nbsp is given by x b x a a b v t d t displaystyle x b x a int a b v t dt nbsp where v t displaystyle v t nbsp is the velocity expressed as a function of time 51 The work done by a force F x displaystyle F x nbsp given as a function of position from an initial position A displaystyle A nbsp to a final position B displaystyle B nbsp is 52 W A B A B F x d x displaystyle W A rightarrow B int A B F x dx nbsp Integrals are also used in thermodynamics where thermodynamic integration is used to calculate the difference in free energy between two given states Computation editAnalytical edit The most basic technique for computing definite integrals of one real variable is based on the fundamental theorem of calculus Let f x be the function of x to be integrated over a given interval a b Then find an antiderivative of f that is a function F such that F f on the interval Provided the integrand and integral have no singularities on the path of integration by the fundamental theorem of calculus a b f x d x F b F a displaystyle int a b f x dx F b F a nbsp Sometimes it is necessary to use one of the many techniques that have been developed to evaluate integrals Most of these techniques rewrite one integral as a different one which is hopefully more tractable Techniques include integration by substitution integration by parts integration by trigonometric substitution and integration by partial fractions Alternative methods exist to compute more complex integrals Many nonelementary integrals can be expanded in a Taylor series and integrated term by term Occasionally the resulting infinite series can be summed analytically The method of convolution using Meijer G functions can also be used assuming that the integrand can be written as a product of Meijer G functions There are also many less common ways of calculating definite integrals for instance Parseval s identity can be used to transform an integral over a rectangular region into an infinite sum Occasionally an integral can be evaluated by a trick for an example of this see Gaussian integral Computations of volumes of solids of revolution can usually be done with disk integration or shell integration Specific results which have been worked out by various techniques are collected in the list of integrals Symbolic edit Main article Symbolic integration Many problems in mathematics physics and engineering involve integration where an explicit formula for the integral is desired Extensive tables of integrals have been compiled and published over the years for this purpose With the spread of computers many professionals educators and students have turned to computer algebra systems that are specifically designed to perform difficult or tedious tasks including integration Symbolic integration has been one of the motivations for the development of the first such systems like Macsyma and Maple A major mathematical difficulty in symbolic integration is that in many cases a relatively simple function does not have integrals that can be expressed in closed form involving only elementary functions include rational and exponential functions logarithm trigonometric functions and inverse trigonometric functions and the operations of multiplication and composition The Risch algorithm provides a general criterion to determine whether the antiderivative of an elementary function is elementary and to compute the integral if is elementary However functions with closed expressions of antiderivatives are the exception and consequently computerized algebra systems have no hope of being able to find an antiderivative for a randomly constructed elementary function On the positive side if the building blocks for antiderivatives are fixed in advance it may still be possible to decide whether the antiderivative of a given function can be expressed using these blocks and operations of multiplication and composition and to find the symbolic answer whenever it exists The Risch algorithm implemented in Mathematica Maple and other computer algebra systems does just that for functions and antiderivatives built from rational functions radicals logarithm and exponential functions Some special integrands occur often enough to warrant special study In particular it may be useful to have in the set of antiderivatives the special functions like the Legendre functions the hypergeometric function the gamma function the incomplete gamma function and so on Extending Risch s algorithm to include such functions is possible but challenging and has been an active research subject More recently a new approach has emerged using D finite functions which are the solutions of linear differential equations with polynomial coefficients Most of the elementary and special functions are D finite and the integral of a D finite function is also a D finite function This provides an algorithm to express the antiderivative of a D finite function as the solution of a differential equation This theory also allows one to compute the definite integral of a D function as the sum of a series given by the first coefficients and provides an algorithm to compute any coefficient Rule based integration systems facilitate integration Rubi a computer algebra system rule based integrator pattern matches an extensive system of symbolic integration rules to integrate a wide variety of integrands This system uses over 6600 integration rules to compute integrals 53 The method of brackets is a generalization of Ramanujan s master theorem that can be applied to a wide range of univariate and multivariate integrals A set of rules are applied to the coefficients and exponential terms of the integrand s power series expansion to determine the integral The method is closely related to the Mellin transform 54 Numerical edit Main article Numerical integration nbsp Numerical quadrature methods rectangle method trapezoidal rule Romberg s method Gaussian quadratureDefinite integrals may be approximated using several methods of numerical integration The rectangle method relies on dividing the region under the function into a series of rectangles corresponding to function values and multiplies by the step width to find the sum A better approach the trapezoidal rule replaces the rectangles used in a Riemann sum with trapezoids The trapezoidal rule weights the first and last values by one half then multiplies by the step width to obtain a better approximation 55 The idea behind the trapezoidal rule that more accurate approximations to the function yield better approximations to the integral can be carried further Simpson s rule approximates the integrand by a piecewise quadratic function 56 Riemann sums the trapezoidal rule and Simpson s rule are examples of a family of quadrature rules called the Newton Cotes formulas The degree n Newton Cotes quadrature rule approximates the polynomial on each subinterval by a degree n polynomial This polynomial is chosen to interpolate the values of the function on the interval 57 Higher degree Newton Cotes approximations can be more accurate but they require more function evaluations and they can suffer from numerical inaccuracy due to Runge s phenomenon One solution to this problem is Clenshaw Curtis quadrature in which the integrand is approximated by expanding it in terms of Chebyshev polynomials Romberg s method halves the step widths incrementally giving trapezoid approximations denoted by T h0 T h1 and so on where hk 1 is half of hk For each new step size only half the new function values need to be computed the others carry over from the previous size It then interpolate a polynomial through the approximations and extrapolate to T 0 Gaussian quadrature evaluates the function at the roots of a set of orthogonal polynomials 58 An n point Gaussian method is exact for polynomials of degree up to 2n 1 The computation of higher dimensional integrals for example volume calculations makes important use of such alternatives as Monte Carlo integration 59 Mechanical edit The area of an arbitrary two dimensional shape can be determined using a measuring instrument called planimeter The volume of irregular objects can be measured with precision by the fluid displaced as the object is submerged Geometrical edit Main article Quadrature mathematics Area can sometimes be found via geometrical compass and straightedge constructions of an equivalent square Integration by differentiation edit Kempf Jackson and Morales demonstrated mathematical relations that allow an integral to be calculated by means of differentiation Their calculus involves the Dirac delta function and the partial derivative operator x displaystyle partial x nbsp This can also be applied to functional integrals allowing them to be computed by functional differentiation 60 Examples editUsing the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus edit The fundamental theorem of calculus allows for straightforward calculations of basic functions 0 p sin x d x cos x x 0 x p cos p cos 0 2 displaystyle int 0 pi sin x dx cos x big x 0 x pi cos pi cos 0 2 nbsp See also edit nbsp Mathematics portalIntegral equation Equations with an unknown function under an integral sign Integral symbol Mathematical symbol used to denote integrals and antiderivativesNotes edit Integral calculus is a very well established mathematical discipline for which there are many sources See Apostol 1967 and Anton Bivens amp Davis 2016 for example References edit Burton 2011 p 117 Heath 2002 Katz 2009 pp 201 204 Katz 2009 pp 284 285 Katz 2009 pp 305 306 Katz 2009 pp 516 517 Struik 1986 pp 215 216 Katz 2009 pp 536 537 Burton 2011 pp 385 386 Stillwell 1989 p 131 Katz 2009 pp 628 629 Katz 2009 p 785 Burton 2011 p 414 Leibniz 1899 p 154 Cajori 1929 pp 249 250 Fourier 1822 231 Cajori 1929 p 246 Cajori 1929 p 182 a b Apostol 1967 p 74 Anton Bivens amp Davis 2016 p 259 Apostol 1967 p 69 Anton Bivens amp Davis 2016 pp 286 287 Krantz 1991 p 173 Rudin 1987 p 5 Siegmund Schultze 2008 p 796 Folland 1999 pp 57 58 Bourbaki 2004 p IV 43 Lieb amp Loss 2001 p 14 Folland 1999 p 53 a b Rudin 1987 p 25 a b Apostol 1967 p 80 Rudin 1987 p 54 Apostol 1967 p 81 a b Rudin 1987 p 63 Apostol 1967 p 202 Apostol 1967 p 205 Montesinos Zizler amp Zizler 2015 p 355 Apostol 1967 p 416 Apostol 1967 p 418 Anton Bivens amp Davis 2016 p 895 a b Anton Bivens amp Davis 2016 p 896 Anton Bivens amp Davis 2016 p 897 Anton Bivens amp Davis 2016 p 980 Anton Bivens amp Davis 2016 p 981 Anton Bivens amp Davis 2016 p 697 Anton Bivens amp Davis 2016 p 991 Anton Bivens amp Davis 2016 p 1014 Anton Bivens amp Davis 2016 p 1024 Feller 1966 p 1 Feller 1966 p 3 Apostol 1967 pp 88 89 Apostol 1967 pp 111 114 Anton Bivens amp Davis 2016 p 306 Apostol 1967 p 116 Rich Scheibe amp Abbasi 2018 Gonzalez Jiu amp Moll 2020 Dahlquist amp Bjorck 2008 pp 519 520 Dahlquist amp Bjorck 2008 pp 522 524 Kahaner Moler amp Nash 1989 p 144 Kahaner Moler amp Nash 1989 p 147 Kahaner Moler amp Nash 1989 pp 139 140 Kempf Jackson amp Morales 2015 Bibliography editAnton Howard Bivens Irl C Davis Stephen 2016 Calculus Early Transcendentals 11th ed John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1 118 88382 2 Apostol Tom M 1967 Calculus Vol 1 One Variable Calculus with an Introduction to Linear Algebra 2nd ed Wiley ISBN 978 0 471 00005 1 Bourbaki Nicolas 2004 Integration I Springer Verlag ISBN 3 540 41129 1 In particular chapters III and IV Burton David M 2011 The History of Mathematics An Introduction 7th ed McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 07 338315 6 Cajori Florian 1929 A History Of Mathematical Notations Volume II Open Court Publishing ISBN 978 0 486 67766 8 Dahlquist Germund Bjorck Ake 2008 Chapter 5 Numerical Integration Numerical Methods in Scientific Computing Volume I Philadelphia SIAM archived from the original on 2007 06 15 Feller William 1966 An introduction to probability theory and its applications John Wiley amp Sons Folland Gerald B 1999 Real Analysis Modern Techniques and Their Applications 2nd ed John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 0 471 31716 0 Fourier Jean Baptiste Joseph 1822 Theorie analytique de la chaleur Chez Firmin Didot pere et fils p 231 Available in translation as Fourier Joseph 1878 The analytical theory of heat Freeman Alexander trans Cambridge University Press pp 200 201 Gonzalez Ivan Jiu Lin Moll Victor H 1 January 2020 An extension of the method of brackets Part 2 Open Mathematics 18 1 983 995 arXiv 1707 08942 doi 10 1515 math 2020 0062 ISSN 2391 5455 S2CID 222004668 Heath T L ed 2002 The Works of Archimedes Dover ISBN 978 0 486 42084 4 Originally published by Cambridge University Press 1897 based on J L Heiberg s Greek version Hildebrandt T H 1953 Integration in abstract spaces Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society 59 2 111 139 doi 10 1090 S0002 9904 1953 09694 X ISSN 0273 0979 Kahaner David Moler Cleve Nash Stephen 1989 Chapter 5 Numerical Quadrature Numerical Methods and Software Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 13 627258 8 Kallio Bruce Victor 1966 A History of the Definite Integral PDF M A thesis University of British Columbia archived from the original on 2014 03 05 retrieved 2014 02 28 Katz Victor J 2009 A History of Mathematics An Introduction Addison Wesley ISBN 978 0 321 38700 4 Kempf Achim Jackson David M Morales Alejandro H 2015 How to path integrate by differentiating Journal of Physics Conference Series IOP Publishing 626 1 012015 arXiv 1507 04348 Bibcode 2015JPhCS 626a2015K doi 10 1088 1742 6596 626 1 012015 S2CID 119642596 Krantz Steven G 1991 Real Analysis and Foundations CRC Press ISBN 0 8493 7156 2 Leibniz Gottfried Wilhelm 1899 Gerhardt Karl Immanuel ed Der Briefwechsel von Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz mit Mathematikern Erster Band Berlin Mayer amp Muller Lieb Elliott Loss Michael 2001 Analysis Graduate Studies in Mathematics vol 14 2nd ed American Mathematical Society ISBN 978 0821827833 Montesinos Vicente Zizler Peter Zizler Vaclav 2015 An Introduction to Modern Analysis illustrated ed Springer ISBN 978 3 319 12481 0 Rich Albert Scheibe Patrick Abbasi Nasser 16 December 2018 Rule based integration An extensive system of symbolic integration rules Journal of Open Source Software 3 32 1073 Bibcode 2018JOSS 3 1073R doi 10 21105 joss 01073 S2CID 56487062 Rudin Walter 1987 Chapter 1 Abstract Integration Real and Complex Analysis International ed McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 07 100276 9 Saks Stanislaw 1964 Theory of the integral English translation by L C Young With two additional notes by Stefan Banach Second revised ed New York Dover Siegmund Schultze Reinhard 2008 Henri Lebesgue in Timothy Gowers June Barrow Green Imre Leader eds Princeton Companion to Mathematics Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 11880 2 Stillwell John 1989 Mathematics and Its History Springer ISBN 0 387 96981 0 Stoer Josef Bulirsch Roland 2002 Topics in Integration Introduction to Numerical Analysis 3rd ed Springer ISBN 978 0 387 95452 3 Struik Dirk Jan ed 1986 A Source Book in Mathematics 1200 1800 Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 08404 1 W3C 2006 Arabic mathematical notation a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link External links edit nbsp Wikibooks has a book on the topic of Calculus Integral Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press 2001 1994 Online Integral Calculator Wolfram Alpha Online books edit Keisler H Jerome Elementary Calculus An Approach Using Infinitesimals University of Wisconsin Stroyan K D A Brief Introduction to Infinitesimal Calculus University of Iowa Mauch Sean Sean s Applied Math Book CIT an online textbook that includes a complete introduction to calculus Crowell Benjamin Calculus Fullerton College an online textbook Garrett Paul Notes on First Year Calculus Hussain Faraz Understanding Calculus an online textbook Johnson William Woolsey 1909 Elementary Treatise on Integral Calculus link from HathiTrust Kowalk W P Integration Theory University of Oldenburg A new concept to an old problem Online textbook Sloughter Dan Difference Equations to Differential Equations an introduction to calculus Numerical Methods of Integration at Holistic Numerical Methods Institute P S Wang Evaluation of Definite Integrals by Symbolic Manipulation 1972 a cookbook of definite integral techniques Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Integral amp oldid 1193838837, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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