What is integration?

1 Answer
Mar 5, 2016

Roughly speaking, integration is the inverse of differentiation, but there are several ways to think about it...

Explanation:

Given a suitably well behaved function f(x):RR->RR, and an interval (a, b), the definite integral int_a^b f(x) dx is the "area under the curve" between a and b.

At any particular point t in RR, the rate of change of area as you increase t is equal to the f(t). That is, the derivative of the integral is equal to the original function.

Integration covers a lot more cases than just Real valued functions of Real numbers. You can integrate over any kind of measurable set - e.g. a plane, a curve, a surface, a volume. The function that you are integrating may have any kind of value that is possible to sum and multiply by a scalar, e.g. Real, Complex, vector.

In such contexts you can think of an integral as a sort of infinite sum of values of a function over infinitesimally small pieces of the set over which you are integrating.

For example, suppose you have a function f(p) defined for points on the surface S of a sphere, with surface area A. Then the average value of f(p) over the surface of the sphere is:

(int_(p in S) f(p) dp) / A

If we split the surface of the sphere into a large number of little patches S_i of areas A_i, each containing a representative point p_i in S_i, then we could approximate the integral over the surface:

int_(p in S) f(p) dp ~~ sum_i A_i f(p_i)