Regarding Upper and lower integral sets.

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SUMMARY

The discussion centers on the definitions of upper and lower integrals as presented in Apostol's calculus. The set S, defined as all numbers obtained from the integral of step functions below a function f, is clarified to be a collection of values rather than a singleton. Each step function s that satisfies the condition s < f yields a distinct numerical value when integrated over the interval [a, b]. This confirms that S consists of multiple values corresponding to different step functions, aligning with the principles of Riemann integration.

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  • Understanding of Riemann integration
  • Familiarity with step functions
  • Knowledge of the definitions of upper and lower integrals
  • Basic concepts of calculus as presented in Apostol's texts
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  • Review Apostol's definitions of upper and lower integrals
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Students of calculus, mathematicians interested in real analysis, and educators teaching integration concepts will benefit from this discussion.

nascentmind
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I am having some doubts in the definitions of the upper and lower integrals in apostol.

There is a statement saying "Let S denote the set of all numbers _{a}\int ^{b} s(x) dx obtained as s runs through all step functions below f i.e. S = { _{a}\int ^{b} s(x) dx | s < f} "

I did not get this. Shouldn't S be a singleton with a only a single element being the summation of the area of all the step functions below f ?
 
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From what I get, the integral refers to the numerical value of the step function

satisfying the condition s<f. So for each such step function you get the associated

number, so you end with S as a collection of numbers.
 
Bacle2 said:
From what I get, the integral refers to the numerical value of the step function

satisfying the condition s<f. So for each such step function you get the associated

number, so you end with S as a collection of numbers.

When I do a \int_{a}^{b} s(x) dx I should have single number no? Even if he is considering different values for the step functions he should finally sum it up because the definition of integration says so right?
 
nascentmind said:
When I do a \int_{a}^{b} s(x) dx I should have single number no? Even if he is considering different values for the step functions he should finally sum it up because the definition of integration says so right?

That sounds right; for each choice of step function you get a numerical value-- the

Riemann integral of the step function.
 

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