Physics-Pure said:
Hello all~
I really was curious as to why dy/dx can be treated as a fraction when solving equations, and not an operator. For example why can
dy/dx = x be the same as dy = xdx?
My second question was what EXACTLY does dx (any variable, I'll just call it x) mean by itself?
Finally, why is indefinite integral notation written (integral sign) f(x) dx? What is the significance of the dx?
Thanks
Someone in my calculus class asked this one day, and my professor responded by saying that \frac{dy}{dx} is not a fraction and should not be treated as a fraction; it is treated as one when solving a differential equation by separation of variables, but he said that that was just because it happened to work. Also, there are apparently two different notations of expressing derivatives: one of them treats \frac{dy}{dx} as a fraction, while the other does not, though I don't know much more about this. There is also a way of thinking of dy, or other variable, as an infinitesimal number, which I don't know much about either.
For your second question, to my knowledge, the d in front of dx or another variable is representative of delta and is symbolic of the change of x, or whatever other variable it is. Therefore \frac{dy}{dx} is the change in the y value with respect to the x value; this is related to the fact that the derivative gives you the instantaneous slope at a given point.
For your final question, the dx represents the change in the x value. When you take the integral of a function, it gives you the area below the graph. This is because the height of a function is represented by f(x), which is getting multiplied by dx, which represents an infinitely small width.
You can go a lot further in-depth with this by looking at the limit definitions of an integral and derivative, and seeing how they work together, though it can get quite complicated. I gained a lot of feeling for what an integral and derivative are due to seeing these limit definitions and thinking about how they relate to each other.