Unit 6 Comprehensive Study: Accumulation and Definite Integrals

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27 Terms

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Accumulation

The total amount of change over time, often represented as area under a curve in calculus.

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Differentiation

The process of finding the rate of change of a quantity.

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Integration

The process of calculating the accumulation of a quantity over an interval.

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Area Under the Curve

Represents the total accumulated change in a quantity when graphed.

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Dimensional Analysis

A method of checking the units in an accumulation problem to ensure correctness.

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Riemann Sum

An approximation of the area under a curve by dividing it into shapes (usually rectangles).

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Left Riemann Sum (LRAM)

A method where the height of rectangles is determined by the function value at the left endpoint.

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Right Riemann Sum (RRAM)

A method where the height of rectangles is determined by the function value at the right endpoint.

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Midpoint Riemann Sum (MRAM)

A method where the height of rectangles is determined by the function value at the midpoint of the interval.

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Trapezoidal Sum

A method that uses trapezoids instead of rectangles to approximate the area under a curve.

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Concavity

The direction of the curve, important for determining over- or underestimation in trapezoidal sums.

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Increasing Function

A function where the y-values increase as the x-values increase.

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Decreasing Function

A function where the y-values decrease as the x-values increase.

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Concave Up

A function that opens upward, where trapezoids will overestimate the area.

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Concave Down

A function that opens downward, where trapezoids will underestimate the area.

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Definite Integral

A limit of a Riemann sum that represents the exact area under a curve.

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Limit Definition of the Definite Integral

As the number of rectangles approaches infinity, the approximation becomes the exact area.

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Sample Point

The specific x-value used to determine the height of rectangles in a Riemann sum.

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Width of Rectangles (Δx)

The width of each rectangle used in Riemann sums, calculated as (b-a)/n.

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Upper Limit of Integration

The value 'b' in the definite integral, indicating the end of the interval.

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Lower Limit of Integration

The value 'a' in the definite integral, indicating the start of the interval.

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Misunderstanding Concavity and Slope

A common mistake where students confuse slope with concavity when determining over- or underestimation.

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Calculating Area with Non-Uniform Widths

A mistake where students assume rectangular widths are constant when they are not.

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n vs k Confusion

The error of mixing up 'n', the total number of rectangles, with 'k', the index in summation.

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Overestimate

When an approximation method results in a value greater than the actual area.

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Underestimate

When an approximation method results in a value less than the actual area.

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Functional Representation

The expression or equation that defines the function being analyzed in integration.