Lecture 14
Lecture 14
• Let us first briefly recall the idea of Riemann integration for functions of single variable.
• Let f be a non-negative continuous function defined on a closed and bounded interval [a, b].
Rb
The curve in the picture below represents the graph of the function f . The integral a f (x)dx is
the area of the region under the curve.
R = {(x, y)| a x b, c y d}
More precisely:
ZZ ZZ X
n
f (x, y)dA = f (x, y)dxdy = lim f (xk , yk ) Ak
R R n!1
k=1
Definition. If f (x, y) 0, then the volume V of the solid that lies above the rectangle
R and below the surface z = f (x, y) is
ZZ
Volume = lim Sn = f (x, y)dA
n!1 R
Multiple Integrals
Let f be a continuous real-valued function defined on a closed interval [a, b]. Let F be the
function defined, for all x in [a, b], by
Z x
F (x) = f (t)dt.
a
Then F is uniformly continuous on [a, b] and di↵erentiable on the open interval (a, b), and
F 0 (x) = f (x)
Let f be a real-valued function on a closed interval [a, b] and F a continuous function on [a, b]
which is an antiderivative of f in (a, b) :
F 0 (x) = f (x).
§ Recall that it is usually difficult to evaluate single integrals directly from the
definition of an integral, but the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus provides a
much easier method.
§ The evaluation of double integrals from first principles is even more difficult,
but here we see how to express a double integral as an iterated integral, which
can then be evaluated by calculating two single integrals.
The following theorem gives a practical method for evaluating a double integral by
expressing it as an iterated integral (in either order).
Fubini’s Theorem says that double integrals over rectangles can be calculated as
iterated integrals. Thus, we can evaluate a double integral by integrating with
respect to one variable at a time using the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus.
The above theorem is named after the Italian mathematician Guido Fubini (1879-1943), who
proved a very general version of this theorem in 1907. But the version for continuous functions
was known to the French mathematician Augustin-Louis Cauchy almost a century earlier.