Calculus: Analytic Geometry and Calculus, with Vectors

(lu) #1

214 Integrals


of using i leads to awkwardness when we finish study of calculus and enter
realms where i is always the imaginary unit whose square is -1. We
use k because it is as good as any and better than most.
We now come to the most fundamental remark that appears in the
theory of Riemann integration; analogous remarks appear in theories
of other integrals. Depending upon the function f and the numbers
a and x that have been selected, it may be true(or it may be false) that
there is a number I such that to each positive number e there corresponds
a positive number S such that
n

(4.23) 1 f(tk) Litk - II < e

k=1

whenever JPJ < S. This is, of course, just a precise way of saying that
there may be a number I such that each Riemann sum with a small norm
is near I. If this I exists, then f is said to be Riemann integrable over the
interval from a to x and I is said to be the Riemann integral off over the
interval. This integral is denoted by the symbol in the formula

(4.24) I= fXf(t)dt


and the symbol is read "the integral from a to x of eff of tee dee tee."
The numbers a and x are called the lower limit and the upper limit of
integration, and we always read the lower one first. The symbol t is
called a dummy variable of integration, the derogatory terminology being
applied because the value of the integral would be the same if t were
replaced by s or u or a or 0 or any other symbol that cannot be confused
with a, x, f, and d. It is a convenience (and sometimes also a source of
misunderstanding, confusion, and controversy) to drag in the notation
of limits and write '

(4.25) lim f (tk) Litk = f a5 f (t) dt.
jPj-'O k=1

A much more substantial convenience results from boiling this down to

(4.251) lim I f (t) At = f ''f(t) dt,


the idea being that we can restore the omitted embellishments whenever
there is a reason for doing so.
In case no such number I exists, we say that f is not Riemann integrable
over the interval from a to x and that faZ f (t) dt does not exist (that is,
does not exist as a Riemann integral). To emphasize the fact that a
bounded function f and an interval a < x S b can be such that af b f (t) dt
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