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  2. Integral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integral

    A line integral (sometimes called a path integral) is an integral where the function to be integrated is evaluated along a curve. [42] Various different line integrals are in use. In the case of a closed curve it is also called a contour integral. The function to be integrated may be a scalar field or a vector field.

  3. Lists of integrals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_of_integrals

    Integration is the basic operation in integral calculus.While differentiation has straightforward rules by which the derivative of a complicated function can be found by differentiating its simpler component functions, integration does not, so tables of known integrals are often useful.

  4. Gaussian integral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaussian_integral

    A different technique, which goes back to Laplace (1812), [3] is the following. Let = =. Since the limits on s as y → ±∞ depend on the sign of x, it simplifies the calculation to use the fact that e −x 2 is an even function, and, therefore, the integral over all real numbers is just twice the integral from zero to infinity.

  5. Leibniz integral rule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leibniz_integral_rule

    With those tools, the Leibniz integral rule in n dimensions is [4] = () + + ˙, where Ω(t) is a time-varying domain of integration, ω is a p-form, = is the vector field of the velocity, denotes the interior product with , d x ω is the exterior derivative of ω with respect to the space variables only and ˙ is the time derivative of ω.

  6. Path integral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Path_integral

    Line integral, the integral of a function along a curve; Contour integral, the integral of a complex function along a curve used in complex analysis; Functional integration, the integral of a functional over a space of curves; Path integral formulation, Richard Feynman's formulation of quantum mechanics using functional integration

  7. Calculus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calculus

    [49]: 163–165 F is an indefinite integral of f when f is a derivative of F. (This use of lower- and upper-case letters for a function and its indefinite integral is common in calculus.) The definite integral inputs a function and outputs a number, which gives the algebraic sum of areas between the graph of the input and the x-axis.

  8. Riemann integral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riemann_integral

    An integral which is in fact a direct generalization of the Riemann integral is the Henstock–Kurzweil integral. Another way of generalizing the Riemann integral is to replace the factors x k + 1 − x k in the definition of a Riemann sum by something else; roughly speaking, this gives the interval of integration a different notion of length.

  9. Exponential integral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exponential_integral

    For real non-zero values of x, the exponential integral Ei(x) is defined as ⁡ = =. The Risch algorithm shows that Ei is not an elementary function.The definition above can be used for positive values of x, but the integral has to be understood in terms of the Cauchy principal value due to the singularity of the integrand at zero.