Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Section 5.2: Definite Integrals
Objectives: Define a Riemann Sum Connect Riemann Sum and Definite Integral Relate the Definite Integral and Area under the curve
2
Sigma Notation k tells us where to begin, n tells us where to end If n is ∞, terms go on forever, and ever, and ever, and ever……
3
Reimann Sum We can use sigma notation to approximate the area under a curve We will add up all the areas of the tiny, little rectangles. We call this a Reimann Sum Rectangles can lie either above or below the x-axis
4
The Definite Integral as a Limit of Riemann Sums
f(x) is on a closed interval [a,b] f is integrable on [a,b] and is the definite integral of f over [a,b] NOTES: is called the partition, and is the longest subinterval length (also may see written as ) is the height of the rectangle (it is the value of the function at some value c in the kth subinterval is the width of the rectangle.
5
The Definite Integral of a Continuous Function of [a, b]
Let f be continuous [a, b] be partitioned into n subintervals of equal length Δx = (b – a)/n. Then the definite integral of f over [a, b] is given by where each ck is chosen arbitrarily in the kth subinterval. (the more subintervals you have, the more accurate the area)
6
The Existence of Definite Integrals
All continuous functions are integrable. That is, if a function f is continuous on an interval [a, b], then its definite integral over [a, b] exists.
7
Definite Integral notation
When you find the value of the integral, you have evaluated the integral. The definite integral is a number!!
8
Let’s break it down….. What does all this mean????
Upper limit of Integration integrand x is the variable of integration Integral Sign Lower limit of integration Read as “The integral from a to b of f of x dx”
9
Express the limit as an integral.
on [0,4]
10
Definite Integral and Area
Area Under a Curve (as a Definite Integral) If y = f(x) is nonnegative and integrable over a closed interval [a, b] then the area under the curve y = f(x) from a to be is the integral of f from a to b.
11
Non-positive Integrable Functions
12
Any Integrable Function
= (area above the x-axis) – (area below the x-axis)
13
Using Geometric Formulas to evaluate the integral
14
The Integral of a Constant
If f(x) = c, where c is a constant, on the interval [a, b], then
15
Examples: Using Geometric Formulas
19
If you were driving at a constant speed of 65 mph from 8am to 11 am, how far did you travel? Write a definite integral, and evaluate.
20
Discontinuous Integrable Functions: Definition implies continuity, but there are some discontinuous integrable functions.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.