What are integrals and how are they used in physics and calculus?

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SUMMARY

Integrals are fundamental mathematical tools used in both physics and calculus, categorized into two types: definite and indefinite. Indefinite integration, or anti-differentiation, retrieves the original function from its derivative, exemplified by the integral of 2x yielding x² + c. Definite integration calculates the area under a curve, such as determining the area between the curve y = x² and the x-axis from x = 0 to x = 1. In physics, integrals are essential for calculating work done by variable forces, illustrating their practical application in real-world scenarios.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of basic calculus concepts, including derivatives
  • Familiarity with functions and their graphical representations
  • Knowledge of geometric area calculations
  • Basic principles of physics related to force and work
NEXT STEPS
  • Study the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus to connect differentiation and integration
  • Learn about Riemann sums as a method for approximating definite integrals
  • Explore applications of integrals in physics, specifically in mechanics and energy calculations
  • Practice solving problems involving both definite and indefinite integrals using tools like Wolfram Alpha
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Students of calculus and physics, educators seeking to explain integration concepts, and anyone interested in applying mathematical principles to solve real-world problems involving variable forces and areas under curves.

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Hi, my physics teacher has recently started putting integrals into all of his examples and notes, but we haven't gotten to integrals in calculus yet.

Could anyone basically tell me what integrals are,. and what they are for
 
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hi,

The same thing also happened to me when I took physics and calculus concurrently. This is an oversimplification, but hopefully it will enough for now.

There are two types of integration; definite and indefinite.

Indefinite integration (also known as anti-differentiation) does exactly what its name implies.

Say you have a function and take its derivative. If you integrate the derivative, you will get the original function back. For example:

y = x^2

\frac {dy} {dx} = 2x

\int 2x \,dx = x^2 + c

where c is an arbitrary constant.

Definite integration is often used to find area. If you have a geometric shape, you can use formulas to find area.

But say you have the above function, y = x^2, and you would like to know the area of the region bound between the x-axis and the curve, between the points x = 0, and x = 1.

You can exactly determine this area by evaluating a definite integral.

One of the many uses of this in physics is to determine the work done by a variable force. Anyway, that’s where I first saw integration.

Reading ahead in your calculus book or asking your math teacher for a sneak preview during his/her office hours might also help you better understand what you’re doing.
 
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That's excellent, Melinda! :) Just a small addendum - think of integration as breaking something up into a very large number of very small bits and adding the results together. For instance, in the case Melinda cited, a variable force - let's say you're trying to figure out how much work gravity does on an object falling from a certain height. Well, that's easy - work is force times distance, so you just multiply the weight of the object by the distance it falls, and boom. No pun intended.

However, suppose the height is so great that gravity can't be treated as a constant - what do you do then? What you might do is break it up - say, figure out what happens for the first quarter of the fall assuming gravity is constant, then refigure gravity and do it for the next quarter, and so on until you get it to the ground. Then you add up the four pieces.

That'll certainly be better than if you took it all at once, but it's still only an approximation. How do you know if the approximation is good enough? Clearly (and this can and should be proved), the smaller the pieces you take, the better your approximation will be. It seems reasonable to suppose that, if you could take an infinite number of pieces and add them all together, there would be no error. This is what integration does, in concept anyway - break the distance into infinitesimal pieces and add the results all together. Any time you have a situation where you're trying to figure the effects of something which varies over a range with which you're concerned, be it distance or time or anything else, integration is the primary tool for analysis.
 

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