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National University of Engineering College of Mechanical Engineering Mechanical-Electrical Engineering Program

This document provides information about the Integral Calculus course offered at the National University of Engineering in Peru. The course is intended for mechanical and electrical engineering students. It covers key concepts of integral calculus including indefinite integrals, techniques for evaluating definite integrals, and applications of integrals to solve engineering problems. Students learn to apply integration methods to calculate areas, volumes, work, moments of inertia, and centers of mass. The course also introduces polar coordinates and numerical integration methods. Students are evaluated based on midterm and final exams, as well as quizzes.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
76 views2 pages

National University of Engineering College of Mechanical Engineering Mechanical-Electrical Engineering Program

This document provides information about the Integral Calculus course offered at the National University of Engineering in Peru. The course is intended for mechanical and electrical engineering students. It covers key concepts of integral calculus including indefinite integrals, techniques for evaluating definite integrals, and applications of integrals to solve engineering problems. Students learn to apply integration methods to calculate areas, volumes, work, moments of inertia, and centers of mass. The course also introduces polar coordinates and numerical integration methods. Students are evaluated based on midterm and final exams, as well as quizzes.

Uploaded by

Eduardo R
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF ENGINEERING

COLLEGE OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERING

MECHANICAL-ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING PROGRAM

MB147 – INTEGRAL CALCULUS

I. GENERAL INFORMATION
CODE : MB147 Integral Calculus
SEMESTER : 2
CREDITS : 5
HOURS PER WEEK : 6 (Theory – Practice)
PREREQUISITES : MB146 Differential Calculus
CONDITION : Compulsory

II. COURSE DESCRIPTION


The course prepares students in the understanding and application of one-dimensional calculus for
analyzing and solving engineering problems. Students understand the concepts of anti-derivative,
indefinite and definite integrals and their applications for computing areas and volumes. Students also
analyze the polar representation of real functions and use them to solve diverse problems. The course
focus on both, clear understanding of concepts and correct application of methods for solving
engineering problems.

III. COURSE OUTCOMES


1. Identify the scientific character of Mathematics and appraise the rigor and objectivity of the
discipline.
2. Recognize the fundamental theorems of Mathematics and apply them into specific and real
problematic situations thoroughly.
3. Interpret the concept of indefinite and definite integrals and apply integrations methods to
calculate areas and volumes.
4. Apply proper integration methods to compute the integral of a function.
5. Apply the integral concepts into Physics: Work / Inertia moments / Center of mass / Gravity
center.
6. Define and apply the polar coordinates into the graphical representations of functions and
into the calculus of surface areas.
7. Calculate integral using numeric methods.

IV. COURSE CONTENTS

1. INDEFINITE INTEGRAL. METHODS OF INTEGRATION


Anti-derivative / Indefinite integrals / Immediate integrals / Integration by algebraic substitution /
Integration by parts / Integrals of trigonometric functions / Integration by trigonometric
substitution / Real function integrations by decomposition into simpler fractions / Integration of
rational expressions of trigonometric functions.
2. DEFINITE INTEGRALS
Summations and their properties / Definite integrals: properties / First and second fundamental
theorems of calculus / Improper integrals / Improper integrals with non-negative integrands:
convergence criteria / Areas of flat surfaces / Volume of a solid of revolution: disc, ring and
cylindrical shell methods.

3. TRASCENDENTAL FUNCTIONS
Exponential, logarithm and hyperbolic functions / Logarithms and exponentials in different
bases / Derivatives and integrals / Integration of trigonometric functions and their inverses /

4. INTEGRATION TECHNIQUES
Integration of powers series of trigonometric functions / Integration of rational functions by
partial fractions / Integration of sine and cosine rational functions / Integration of non-rational
functions / Integration of binomial differentials / Integration by substitution.

5. NON-PROPER INTEGRALS
Non-proper integrals of first and second type / Convergence and divergence criteria of non-
proper integrals / Gamma function / Beta function / Introduction to first order differential
equations / Formulation of problems with differential equations / Separable variables
differential equations.

6. APPLICATION OF DEFINITE INTEGRAL


Arc length in rectangular coordinates / Work / Inertia moments / Center of mass / Center of
gravity / Quadratic surfaces / Polar coordinates / Graphical representations in polar
coordinates / Areas in polar coordinates.

7. NUMERIC INTEGRATION
Approximation of integrals / Trapeze method / Prism method / Simpson method / Power series:
Taylor series, McLaurin series / Approximation of integrals through power series.

V. METHODOLOGY
The course takes place in theory and practice sessions. In theory sessions, the instructor presents the
concepts, theorems and applications. In practice sessions, different kinds of problems are solved and
the solutions are analyzed. Active participation of students is encouraged in all sessions.

VI. GRADING SYSTEM


The Final Grade (PF) is calculated with the following formula:

PF = (EP + EF + PP) / 3

ME: Mid-term exam EF: Final Exam


PP: Average of quizzes

VII. BIBLIOGRAPHY
1. LARSON – HOSTETLER
Differential and Integral Calculus
Mc Graw Hill, Ed., 2012, Mexico
2. ROSS L. FINNERY
Single Variable Calculus
Prentice - Hall, Ed., 2010, Mexico

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