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EGR 1101: Unit 10 Lecture #1 The Integral (Sections 9.1, 9.2 of Rattan/Klingbeil text) Antiderivative Suppose f(x) is the derivative of F(x). Then F(x) is an antiderivative of f(x). Example: 3x2 is the derivative of x3, so x3 is an antiderivative of 3x2 A Function Has Many Antiderivatives 3x2 has many antiderivatives. One of them is x3. Another one is x3 + 1. Another one is x3 + 2. In fact, 3x2 has infinitely many antiderivatives of the form x3 + C, where C is any constant. The dx symbol The symbol for antiderivative is dx. Read this as “antiderivative with respect to x.” For example, we write 3x dx x 2 3 C This means exactly the same thing as d 3 2 ( x C ) 3x dx Indefinite Integral Another name for antiderivative is indefinite integral. So we can also read 3x dx x 2 3 C as “The indefinite integral with respect to x of 3x2 is x3 + C.” Table of Integrals Just as we use a table of derivatives to differentiate functions, we use a table of integrals to integrate functions. Many of the entries in a table of integrals are just the “reverse” of corresponding entries in a table of derivatives. Differentiation and Indefinite Integration Cancel Each Other Differentiation and indefinite integration are inverse operations, which means they cancel each other. So d dx and f ( x)dx f ( x) df ( x) dx dx f ( x) C Today’s Examples 1. 2. Paving a driveway Work Definite Integration The definite integral of a function f(x) from a to b is the area under the graph of that function between x=a and x=b. b The symbol for definite integration is dx a n b i 1 a Area lim f ( xi )x f ( x)dx n Connection Between Definite Integration and Antiderivative According to the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus, b f ( x)dx F (b) F (a) a where F(x) is an antiderivative of f(x). We use the following shorthand notation: b f ( x)dx F ( x) b a a Review: A Little History 1. 2. 3. 4. Seventeenth-century mathematicians faced at least four big problems that required new techniques: Slope of a curve Rates of change (such as velocity and acceleration) Maxima and minima of functions Area under a curve Using MATLAB to Integrate the Hard Part of Example #1 >> syms x >> int(sqrt(2500-(x-50)^2), 0, 50) Using MATLAB to Plot the Curves in Example #2 >> fplot('2*x^2+3*x+4', [0 1 0 100]) >> hold on >> fplot('2*sin(pi/2*x)+3*cos(pi/2*x)', [0 1 0 100], 'g') >> fplot('4*exp(pi*x)', [0 1 0 100], 'r') EGR 1101: Unit 10 Lecture #2 Applications of Integrals in Statics (Sections 9.3, 9.4 of Rattan/Klingbeil text) Today’s Examples 1. 2. Centroid of a right triangle Distributed load on a beam Centroid An area’s centroid is the point located at the “weighted-average” position of all points in the area. For objects of uniform density, the centroid is the same as the object’s center of mass. Centroids of Simple 2D Shapes For a 2D planar lamina (very thin, rigid sheet of wood, metal, plastic, etc.), the centroid (denoted G) is the point at which you can balance it on your fingertip. Unweighted Average Position For n discrete objects located in a plane at coordinates (x1, y1), (x2, y2), …, (xn, yn), the unweighted average position is: n x x i 1 n i n , y y i 1 n i Weighted Average Position For n discrete objects located in a plane at coordinates (x1, y1), (x2, y2), …, (xn, yn), with weights p1, p2, … pn, the weighted average position is: n x x p i 1 n i i p i 1 i n , y y p i 1 n i i p i 1 i Position of Centroid For the area under a curve y(x) from x=a to x=b, the coordinates of the area’s centroid are given by b x x y( x)dx a b b , y 1 2 ( y ( x)) dx 2a b y( x)dx y( x)dx a a Position of Centroid (Using y-axis) For the area under a curve x(y) from y=a to y=b, the x and y coordinates of the area’s centroid are given by b x 1 2 ( x( y )) dy 2a b b , y y x( y)dy a b x( y)dy x( y)dy a a Statically Equivalent Loads Two loads on a beam are statically equivalent if 1. 2. they exert the same downward force, and they exert the same moment (tendency to rotate the beam) about any point. Example of Two Statically Equivalent Loads 25 lb 25 lb Case 1 50 lb Case 2 Same downward force and same moment (tendency to rotate) in both cases, so these are statically equivalent. Example of Two Loads That Are Not Statically Equivalent 50 lb Case 1 50 lb Case 2 Same downward force in both cases, but different moments (tendencies to rotate), so these are not statically equivalent. Moment of a Force The moment of a force about a point is defined as the magnitude of the force times its distance from the point. On previous slide, moment about the center point is zero in Case 2, but is nonzero in Case 1. Finding Statically Equivalent Load Problem: For a distributed load described by load curve w(x), find the size R and the location l of a concentrated load that is statically equivalent to the distributed load. Solution: R is the area under the load curve . l is the x-coordinate of the centroid of the area under the load curve. Static Equilibrium(Again) In Unit 4 we saw that for a system in static equilibrium, the external forces acting on the object add to zero: Fx 0 F y 0 The other condition required for static equilibrium is that the moments of the external forces about any point add to zero: M0 0