LarCalc10 ch01 Sec1
LarCalc10 ch01 Sec1
A Preview of Calculus
Objectives
Understand what calculus is and how it
compares with precalculus.
Understand that the tangent line problem is
basic to calculus.
Understand that the area problem is also
basic to calculus.
What Is Calculus?
What Is Calculus?
Calculus is the mathematics of change. For instance,
calculus is the mathematics of velocities, accelerations,
tangent lines, slopes, areas, volumes, arc lengths,
centroids, curvatures, and a variety of other concepts that
have enabled scientists, engineers, and economists to
model real-life situations.
Although precalculus mathematics also deals with
velocities, accelerations, tangent lines, slopes, and so on,
there is a fundamental difference between precalculus
mathematics and calculus.
Precalculus mathematics is more static, whereas calculus
is more dynamic.
Examples
Here are some examples.
An object traveling at a constant velocity can be analyzed
with precalculus mathematics. To analyze the velocity of an
accelerating object, you need calculus.
The slope of a line can be analyzed with precalculus
mathematics. To analyze the slope of a curve, you need
calculus.
Examples
The curvature of a circle is constant and can be analyzed
with precalculus mathematics. To analyze the variable
curvature of a general curve, you need calculus.
The area of a rectangle can be analyzed with precalculus
mathematics. To analyze the area under a general curve,
you need calculus.
What Is Calculus?
Each of these situations involves the same general strategy the
reformulation of precalculus mathematics through the use of the limit
process.
So, one way to answer the question What is calculus? is to say that
calculus is a limit machine that involves three stages.
The first stage is precalculus mathematics, such as the slope of a line
or the area of a rectangle.
The second stage is the limit process, and the third stage is a new
calculus formulation, such as a derivative or integral.
What Is Calculus?
Here are some familiar precalculus concepts coupled their calculus
counterparts:
What Is Calculus?
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What Is Calculus?
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What Is Calculus?
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Figure 1.1
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Figure 1.3
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Figure 1.4
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