enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Lists of integrals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_of_integrals

    Integration is the basic operation in integral calculus. While differentiation has straightforward rules by which the derivative of a complicated function can be found by differentiating its simpler component functions, integration does not, so tables of known integrals are often useful.

  3. Simpson's rule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simpson's_rule

    Simpson's 1/3 rule. Simpson's 1/3 rule, also simply called Simpson's rule, is a method for numerical integration proposed by Thomas Simpson. It is based upon a quadratic interpolation and is the composite Simpson's 1/3 rule evaluated for . Simpson's 1/3 rule is as follows: where is the step size for .

  4. Integral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integral

    t. e. In mathematics, an integral is the continuous analog of a sum, which is used to calculate areas, volumes, and their generalizations. Integration, the process of computing an integral, is one of the two fundamental operations of calculus, [a] the other being differentiation. Integration was initially used to solve problems in mathematics ...

  5. Leibniz integral rule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leibniz_integral_rule

    This case is also known as the Leibniz integral rule. The following three basic theorems on the interchange of limits are essentially equivalent: the interchange of a derivative and an integral (differentiation under the integral sign; i.e., Leibniz integral rule); the change of order of partial derivatives; the change of order of integration ...

  6. Newton–Cotes formulas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newton–Cotes_formulas

    Newton–Cotes formula for. In numerical analysis, the Newton–Cotes formulas, also called the Newton–Cotes quadrature rules or simply Newton–Cotes rules, are a group of formulas for numerical integration (also called quadrature) based on evaluating the integrand at equally spaced points. They are named after Isaac Newton and Roger Cotes.

  7. Integration by parts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integration_by_parts

    Integration by parts is a heuristic rather than a purely mechanical process for solving integrals; given a single function to integrate, the typical strategy is to carefully separate this single function into a product of two functions u(x)v(x) such that the residual integral from the integration by parts formula is easier to evaluate than the ...

  8. List of definite integrals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_definite_integrals

    e. In mathematics, the definite integral. is the area of the region in the xy -plane bounded by the graph of f, the x -axis, and the lines x = a and x = b, such that area above the x -axis adds to the total, and that below the x -axis subtracts from the total. The fundamental theorem of calculus establishes the relationship between indefinite ...

  9. Integral of inverse functions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integral_of_inverse_functions

    Miscellanea. v. t. e. In mathematics, integrals of inverse functions can be computed by means of a formula that expresses the antiderivatives of the inverse of a continuous and invertible function , in terms of and an antiderivative of . This formula was published in 1905 by Charles-Ange Laisant. [1]