How can this discrepancy be explained?

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@All,

I've attached a short text demonstrating a discrepancy in the numerical calculation of an integral and series supposed to describe the same thing. What are your thoughts? What might this discrepancy be due to?
 

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It's kind of confusing to read you calculation of the derivative, because your variables keep changing names. At one point you have E(t) when you mean E(T), you have these functions Iin and Vin whose difference from I and V is unclear (if there is one).

Then you say capital T is the period, which would seem to indicate that it's a constant and not a variable. I can't really figure out what your function is
 
Iin and Vin and I and V are the same quantities.
 
And what about the fact that the definition of E(t) is not a function that actually depends on t? I would assume that it was intended to read E(T) but you later define T to be the period of your voltage so that wouldn't be a function either
 
Correct, it's E(T) where, T, before defining it as the period is a variable. I should've started with E(\tau) = \int_0^\tau I_{in}V_{in} dt instead.
 
Another correction. Please replace the word 'integral' with the word 'series' in the following part of the last paragraph:

For values of F < 0 not only the integral tends towards zero but after a certain F it becomes negative. The opposite is observed when F > 0. In this case the integral becomes more and more positive with the increase of F.
 
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