How can I determine the area between two curves?

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SUMMARY

The area between two curves can be determined by integrating the difference between the functions that define the curves. For the functions y1(x) = x^2 and y2(x) = -x^2 + 4x, the area A is calculated using the integral A = ∫[y2(x) - y1(x)] dx from the intersection points, specifically A = ∫_0^2 [(-x^2 + 4x) - x^2] dx. It is crucial to identify the upper and lower functions correctly, subtracting the lower function from the upper function to obtain the area. The intersection points of the curves are found by solving y1(x) = y2(x).

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mathelord
I want to know how the area between two curves can be determined,do i just multiply the functions and then equate everything to 0,so i can get the limits,and the integrate the multiplied function within those limits
 
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Mathelord, your description indicates some confusion. I plotted two functions:

y1(x)=x^2

y2(x)=-x^2+4x

To find the area between them, in this particular case, you would subtract them:

A=\int_0^2 [y2(x)-y1(x)] dx

=\int_0^2[(-x^2+4x)-x^2] dx

You can do the rest right?
 

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mathelord said:
I want to know how the area between two curves can be determined,do i just multiply the functions and then equate everything to 0,so i can get the limits,and the integrate the multiplied function within those limits
NO, you don't "multiply the functions" OR "equate everything to 0"! I wonder where you would have gotten the idea that you should multiply the two functions. The limits of integration are the values of x where the area "ends"- where the two curves intersect. To find where the curves y= f(x) and y= g(x) intersect, solve y= f(x)= g(x).

Don't "integrate the multiplied function". Remember the "Riemann sums" that become the integral? Each term is the area of a skinny rectangle with width Δx and height the difference between the two functions: f(x)- g(x). You integrate the difference between the two functions.
 
do i just subtract one from the other,which is the exact on to be subtracted from
 
Subtract the lower function from the higher function.

In Saltydog's example the lower function is x^2 and the upper function is 4x-x^2.
 
in cases like ax^2+bx+c,and -ax^2-bx-c.which is the lower function so i can get one integrated
 
Just graph them and check, or evaluate a test point, f(x) and g(x) to see which is lower.
 

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