Understanding Accumulation, Riemann Sums, and the Definite Integral (AP Calculus AB Unit 6)

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25 Terms

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Accumulation (in calculus)

The process of adding up many small contributions from a continuously varying rate of change to find a total (e.g., total change over an interval).

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Rate of change

A quantity that describes how fast something changes with respect to an input (e.g., velocity in meters per second, flow in gallons per minute).

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Accumulated change (total over an interval)

The overall amount a quantity changes over an interval, found by combining many small changes (often via an integral).

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Unit analysis (rate × width)

Checking units to interpret accumulation: multiplying a rate (units per input) by a small input width cancels the input unit and yields units of the accumulated quantity.

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Signed area

Area interpretation that counts regions above the axis as positive and regions below the axis as negative, matching net accumulation.

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Net change

The overall change on an interval that combines positive and negative contributions (equivalent to signed area under a rate curve).

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Total change (total variation)

The amount of change ignoring sign, found by adding magnitudes (often requires integrating an absolute value or splitting into sign-consistent intervals).

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Area under a rate curve (interpretation)

For a rate function r(x), the accumulation from a to b is represented by the signed area between r and the x-axis on [a,b].

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Accumulation function

A function defined by accumulating a rate up to a variable endpoint, typically A(x)=∫_a^x f(t) dt.

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Dummy variable

The variable used inside an integral (e.g., t in ∫_a^x f(t)dt) that serves only as a placeholder and does not affect the outside variable.

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Initial value of an accumulation function

A(a)=∫_a^a f(t) dt = 0; accumulating over an interval of zero length gives zero.

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Displacement

Net change in position, commonly given by integrating velocity: s(t)=∫_0^t v(u) du (can be positive or negative).

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Distance traveled (via integrals)

Total path length that ignores direction; often computed as ∫ |v(t)| dt or by splitting into intervals where velocity keeps a constant sign.

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Riemann sum

An approximation of an integral/accumulation formed by summing rectangle areas f(x_i*)Δx over subintervals of [a,b].

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Subinterval

One of the smaller intervals formed when [a,b] is partitioned into n pieces for a Riemann sum.

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Equal subinterval width (Δx)

For n equal pieces of [a,b], the common width is Δx=(b−a)/n.

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Partition points

The endpoints that divide [a,b] into subintervals, typically x_i = a + iΔx for i=0,1,…,n.

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Sample point (x_i*)

A chosen x-value within the i-th subinterval used to set the rectangle height in a Riemann sum.

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Left Riemann sum

A Riemann sum using left endpoints as sample points (typically xi* = x{i−1}).

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Right Riemann sum

A Riemann sum using right endpoints as sample points (typically xi* = xi).

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Midpoint Riemann sum

A Riemann sum using midpoints as sample points (xi* = (x{i−1}+x_i)/2 = a+(i−1/2)Δx).

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Overestimate/underestimate rule (monotonic case)

If f is increasing on [a,b], left sums tend to underestimate and right sums tend to overestimate; if f is decreasing, the opposite tends to occur.

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Summation notation (sigma notation)

A compact way to write repeated addition, such as a Riemann sum: ∑{i=1}^n f(xi*)Δx.

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Definite integral

The limit of Riemann sums as the partition gets infinitely fine: ∫a^b f(x) dx = lim{n→∞} ∑{i=1}^n f(xi*)Δx (if the limit exists).

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“Rate times width” structure

A setup check for accumulation: each small contribution should look like (rate)×(small input width), i.e., f(x_i*)Δx or ∫ f(x) dx.

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