Sideway
output.to from Sideway
Calculus


CalculusFunctionLimitInstantaneous Change

ContinuityInstantaneous Change

Draft for Information Only

Content

  Instantaneous Change
  Infinitesimal Change
  Instantaneous Change of a funtion
  Differential Change of a funtion
  Ratio of Differential Changes of a function
  Summation of Differential changes of a function

Instantaneous Change

Instantaneous change is the fundamental idea of calculus by making use of the concept of limit for a function to study the infinitesimal change of the function at an tiny instant on the interval of the continuous function.

Infinitesimal Change

A small increment or decrement usually refers to a small but finite change in the independent variable or the functional value of a function avaiable. When this small finite change becomes very small, then the very small finite change is called Delta. Imply

 IMAGE...

When taking limit, the very small finite change becomes a tiny infinitely small change, the infinitesimal change. The infinitesimal change is called delta. Imply

 IMAGE...

Instantaneous Change of a funtion

For a continuous function, when taking limit as x approaches c or Δx approaches 0, the limit of the function at x=c is equal to the functional value of the function at x=c. Since c can be any number, by considering the functional value y of the functaion at x as the instantaneous value f(x) of the function at x, the infinitesimal change δy of the function at x can then be considered as the instantaneous change of the functional value of a function at x due to the infinitesimal change δx of the independenc variable. Imply

 IMAGE...

Differential Change of a funtion

Differential or Differential change is an infinitesimal change of a function or independent variable. A differential is an indivisible extreme small quantity  of the functional value or the independent variable value of a function. A differential change is therefore denoted by a prefix character "d". Imply

 IMAGE...

The function y=f(x) is a function of x only. The differential change dy is a function of x and dx. Since the differential change dy is derived from the function y, there is a close relation between the differential change dy and the function y. It is possible to develop  the differential change dy in the form of g(x)dx by approximation. Imply

 IMAGE...

When taking limit as δx approaches 0, the differential dy can be expressed as a functional relationship with the differential dx. The function g(x) is derived from the function f(x) and is also a function of x only. By expressing the differential change dy in the form of g(x)dx, a simple functional relationship between the differential change dx and the differential change dy can then be established. This expression is also the fundamental of "calculus of differentiation" and "calculus of integration".

Ratio of Differential Changes of a function

Calculus of differentiation is the study of ratio of the differential changes of a function. Since the relation between the differential of the functional value and the differential of the independent variable value is related by a function, a differential change ratio between the differential changes dy and dx can be obtained by dividing both sides of the expression by the differential change dx. Imply

 IMAGE...

The function g(x) becomes the differential change ratio. Since the function g(x) is derived from the function f(x), the differential change ratio g(x) is the rate of the differential change dy of the functional value y=f(x) over the differential change dx of the independent variable value x at x and is also a function of x only. By the concept of limit, the differential change ratio can be expressed in the form of instantaneous rate of change of a function y=f(x) when x approaching a. Imply

 IMAGE...

By taking the limit as x approaches a, the instantaneous rate of change of a function at x=a  is called the derivative f'(x) of a function f(x) at x=a.

  IMAGE...

Summation of Differential changes of a function

Calculus of integration is the study of summation of the differentials of a function. Since the differential dy of the functional value y can be expressed in term of the differential dx of the independent variable value x, the difference between two functional values can be obtained by the summation of the differential changes dx over the interval of the independent variable value x. Imply

 IMAGE...

The function g(x) derived from the function f(x) can be used to determine the difference between two functional values of the function y=f(x).  By the concept of limit, when taking limit as n approaches infinity, the difference between two functional values of the function y=f(x) on internal [x1,xn] is equal to the sum of the differential changes dy on the  internal [x1,xn]. If the differential dy is expressed in term of the rate of differential changes g(x), then the difference between two functional values of the function y=f(x) when x approaching a is

 IMAGE...

By taking the limit as the differential dx or du approaches 0, the sum of individual signed area bounded by the function g(u) on the interval [x,a] is called the integral f(u)  of a function g(x) on the interval u=[x,a].

 IMAGE...

©sideway

ID: 130100007 Last Updated: 6/30/2013 Revision: 1 Ref:

close

References

  1. S. James, 1999, Calculus
  2. B. Joseph, 1978, University Mathematics: A Textbook for Students of Science & Engineering
close

Latest Updated LinksValid XHTML 1.0 Transitional Valid CSS!Nu Html Checker Firefox53 Chromena IExplorerna
IMAGE

Home 5

Business

Management

HBR 3

Information

Recreation

Hobbies 8

Culture

Chinese 1097

English 339

Reference 79

Computer

Hardware 249

Software

Application 213

Digitization 32

Latex 52

Manim 205

KB 1

Numeric 19

Programming

Web 289

Unicode 504

HTML 66

CSS 65

SVG 46

ASP.NET 270

OS 429

DeskTop 7

Python 72

Knowledge

Mathematics

Formulas 8

Algebra 84

Number Theory 206

Trigonometry 31

Geometry 34

Coordinate Geometry 2

Calculus 67

Complex Analysis 21

Engineering

Tables 8

Mechanical

Mechanics 1

Rigid Bodies

Statics 92

Dynamics 37

Fluid 5

Fluid Kinematics 5

Control

Process Control 1

Acoustics 19

FiniteElement 2

Natural Sciences

Matter 1

Electric 27

Biology 1

Geography 1


Copyright © 2000-2024 Sideway . All rights reserved Disclaimers last modified on 06 September 2019