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To: Harmless Teddy Bear
I look at it more as, "Yes, it ends, but we have now. So let's have a blast while we last."

And eat dessert first, because life is short.

I think about this too. We have fire, and we have ash. The ash seems obvious enough, and we treat it with respect, but where does the fire go?

It may be the difference between Quantum Mechanics and Newtonian Physics, but it seems intuitively obvious that the fire, or spirit, does not utterly disappear. Where it does go may remain, as it always has been, a lifelong mystery.

835 posted on 01/02/2006 10:10:26 AM PST by NicknamedBob (How can I compete in a world of Cat 5 and wireless when my brain is wired by knob and tube?)
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To: NicknamedBob
Entropy.
838 posted on 01/02/2006 10:13:52 AM PST by Irish_Thatcherite (~~~A vote for Bertie Ahern is a vote for Gerry Adams!~~~)
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To: NicknamedBob

Calculus and Analysis Calculus Integrals
MathWorld Contributors Cortzen


Integral



An integral is a mathematical object that can be interpreted as an area or a generalization of area. Integrals, together with derivatives, are the fundamental objects of calculus. Other words for integral include antiderivative and primitive. The Riemann integral is the simplest integral definition and the only one usually encountered in physics and elementary calculus. In fact, according to Jeffreys and Jeffreys (1988, p. 29), "it appears that cases where these methods [i.e., generalizations of the Riemann integral] are applicable and Riemann's [definition of the integral] is not are too rare in physics to repay the extra difficulty."

The Riemann integral of the function over from to is written

(1)

Note that if , the integral is written simply

(2)

as opposed to .

Every definition of an integral is based on a particular measure. For instance, the Riemann integral is based on Jordan measure, and the Lebesgue integral is based on Lebesgue measure. The process of computing an integral is called integration (a more archaic term for integration is quadrature), and the approximate computation of an integral is termed numerical integration.

There are two classes of (Riemann) integrals: definite integrals such as (ž), which have upper and lower limits, and indefinite integrals, such as

(3)

which are written without limits. The first fundamental theorem of calculus allows definite integrals to be computed in terms of indefinite integrals, since if is the indefinite integral for , then

(4)

Since the derivative of a constant is zero, indefinite integrals are defined only up to an arbitrary constant of integration , i.e.,

(5)

Wolfram Research maintains a web site http://integrals.wolfram.com/ that can find the indefinite integral of many common (and not so common) functions.

Differentiating integrals leads to some useful and powerful identities. For instance, if is continuous, then

(6)

which is the first fundamental theorem of calculus. Other derivative-integral identities include

(7)

the Leibniz integral rule

(8)

(Kaplan 1992, p. 275), its generalization

(9)

(Kaplan 1992, p. 258), and

(10)

as can be seen by applying (ž) on the left side of (ž) and using partial integration.

Other integral identities include

(11)

(12)

(13)
(14)

and the amusing integral identity



SO THERE!


839 posted on 01/02/2006 10:14:20 AM PST by stephenjohnbanker (Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to all our troops at home and abroad!!)
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To: NicknamedBob

Man, that is strange. The equations disappeared when I posted them. The ghost of Rod Serling is amongst us!


842 posted on 01/02/2006 10:18:39 AM PST by stephenjohnbanker (Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to all our troops at home and abroad!!)
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