Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byHilary Stevenson Modified over 9 years ago
1
THE NATURAL LOGARITHMIC FUNCTION: INTEGRATION 2013 - 2014 AP CALCULUS AB CHAPTER 5, SECTION 2
2
LOG RULE FOR INTEGRATION
3
ALSO…
4
USING THE LOG RULE FOR INTEGRATION
5
USING THE LOG RULE WITH A CHANGE OF VARIABLES
6
FINDING AREA WITH THE LOG RULE
8
RECOGNIZING QUOTIENT FORMS OF THE LOG RULE
12
USING LONG DIVISION BEFORE INTEGRATING
14
CHANGE OF VARIABLES WITH THE LOG RULE
16
INTEGRATION Integrating is not as straightforward as differentiation. You have to be able to recognize what is going on inside the equations. Here are a few guidelines that are listed in the book. Lear a basic list of integration formulas (you have 12: Power Rule, Log Rule, and 10 trig rules) Find an integration formula that resembles all or part of the integrand to try an figure out what u is. Guess and check here if needed. If you cannot find U substitution, try altering the formula to make it easier.
17
U -SUBSTITUTION AND THE LOG RULE
18
USING A TRIG IDENTITY
19
INTEGRALS OF THE SIX BASIC TRIGONOMETRIC FUNCTIONS
20
INTEGRATING TRIGONOMETRIC FUNCTIONS
21
FINDING AN AVERAGE VALUE
22
CH 5.2 HOMEWORK Pg 338 – 339, #’s: 1 – 41 every other odd, 47, 71, 75 (ignore the direction about Simpson’s rule)
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.