Top Banner
AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus
40

AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

Feb 24, 2016

Download

Documents

kele__

AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus. The Fundamental Theorem of Calculus:. 1. If ,then . 2. One of the hardest calculus topics to teach in the old days was Riemann sums. They were hard to draw, hard to compute, and (many felt) totally unnecessary. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

Page 2: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

The Fundamental Theorem of Calculus:

If ,then f x a

b dx F b F a .

ddx

f t dt f x a

x .

1.

2.

)()(' xfxF

Page 3: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

One of the hardest calculus topics to teach in the old days was Riemann sums.

They were hard to draw, hard to compute, and (many felt) totally unnecessary.

Page 4: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

Then along came the TI graphing calculators. Using the integral utility in the CALC menu, students could actually see an integral accumulating value from left to right along the x-axis, just as a limit of Riemann sums would do:

Page 5: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

So now we can do all kinds of summing problems before we even mention an antiderivative.

Historically, that’s what scientists had to do before calculus.

Here’s why it mattered to them:

mi/hr

hr1 4

40

20

60v(t) = 40

d = 120 mi

Page 6: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

mi/hr

hr1 4

40

20

60

v(t)

d = 120 mi

The calculus pioneers knew that the area would still yield distance, but what was the connection to tangent lines?

And was there an easy way to find these irregularly-shaped areas?

Page 7: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

Since the time of Archimedes, scientists had been finding areas of irregularly-shaped regions by dividing them into regularly-shaped regions. That is what Riemann sums are all about.

2.033281 2.008248 2.000329

With graphing calculators, students can find these sums without the tedium. They can also imagine the tedium of doing these sums by hand!

Page 8: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

Best of all, they can actually see the limiting case:

And the calculator shows the thin rectangles accumulating from left to right – ideal for understanding the FTC!

Page 9: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

a b

y=f(t)

Let us consider a positive continuous function f defined on [a, b].

Choose an arbitrary x in [a, b].

x

Page 10: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

Each choice of x determines a unique area from a to x, denoted as usual by

( )x

af t dt

a b

y=f(t)

x

Page 11: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

So ( ) ( ).x

a

d f t dt f xdx

But that is only half the story.

Now that we know that is an antiderivative of f,we know that it differs from any antiderivative of f by a constant.

That is, if F is any antiderivative of f,

( )x

af t dt

( ) ( ) .x

af t dt F x C

Page 12: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

To find C, we can plug in a:

( ) ( )

0 ( )( )

a

af t dt F a C

F a CC F a

So ( ) ( ) ( ).x

af t dt F x F a

Now plug in b:

( ) ( ) ( ).b

af t dt F b F a

Page 13: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

This was the FTC. This was the result that changed the world.

2.000329

Now, instead of wasting a full afternoon just to get an approximation of the area under one arch of the sine curve, you could find one antiderivative, plug in two numbers, and subtract!

0sin( ) cos( ) cos( ) cos(0) 2.

0x dx x

Page 14: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

Since 2000, the AP Calculus Test Development Committee has been emphasizing a conceptual understanding of the definite integral, resulting in these “new” problem types:

Functions defined as integrals

Accumulation Problems

Integrals from Tables

Finding , given and

Interpreting the Definite Integral( )f b ( )f a ( )f x

Page 15: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

Problem of the:

Suppose 3

1( ) 2

xf t dt x x k .

(a) Find f(x). (b) Find k.

Page 16: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

3

1

2

( ) 2 )

( ) 3 2

xd df t dt x x kdx dx

f x x

(a) By the Fundamental Theorem,

(b) Plug in x = 1:1 3

1( ) 1 2(1)

0 11

f t dt k

kk

Page 17: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

If 2( )f x x , which of the following could be the graph of

1( )

xy f t dt ?

(A)

(B)

(C)

(D)

(E)

Here was the problem (1987):

Page 18: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

This problem had been checked:

1. by the author who had written it;

2. by the committee that had okayed it;

3. by the committee that had okayed it for a pre-test;

4. by the ETS test development specialists;

5. The committee, reviewing the final form of the college pre-test.

Page 19: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

The proposed key was (B). That is,

While everyone was concentrating on the Fundamental Theorem application, they had missed the hidden “initial condition” that y must equal zero when x = 1!

If 2( )f x x , the graph of 1

( )x

y f t dt could be

(B)

Page 20: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

Here’s 1995 / BC-6:

12

-1-2-3

1 2 3 4 50

Let f be a function whose domain is the closed interval [0, 5]. The graph of f is shown above.

Let 3

20

( ) ( ) .x

h x f t dt

(a) Find the domain of h. (b) Find (2).h (c) At what x is h(x) a minimum? Show the analysis that leads to your conclusion.

Page 21: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

(a) The domain of h is all x for which

is defined:32

0( )

x

f t dt

0 3 5 6 4

2x x

(b) A little Chain Rule:

32

0

1( ) ( ) 32 2

1 3(2) (4)2 2

xd xh x f t dt fdx

h f

Page 22: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

12

-1-2-3

1 2 3 4 50

Let f be a function whose domain is the closed interval [0, 5]. The graph of f is shown above.

Let 3

20

( ) ( ) .x

h x f t dt

(a) Find the domain of h. (b) Find (2).h (c) At what x is h(x) a minimum? Show the analysis that leads to your conclusion.

Page 23: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

(c) Since is positive from

-6 to -1 and negative from -1 to 4, the minimum occurs at an endpoint. By comparing areas, h(4) < h(-6) = 0, so the minimum occurs at x = 4.

32

0( )

x

f t dt

This “area comparison” genre of problem was pretty common in the early graphing calculator days.

Page 24: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

The amount of water in a storage tank, in gallons, is modeled by a continuous function on the time interval 0 7t , where t is measured in hours. In this model, rates are given as follows: (i) The rate at which water enters the tank is 2( ) 100 sinf t t t

gallons per hour for 0 7t . (ii) The rate at which water leaves the tank is

250 for 0 3

( ) gallons per hour.2000 for 3 7

tg t

t

The graphs of f and g, which intersect at t = 1.617 and t = 5.076, are shwn in the figure above. At time t = 0, the amount of water in the tank is 5000 gallons.

500

2000

1000

1500

2500

1 2 3 4 5 6 7

2007 / AB-2 BC-2

Page 25: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

(a) How many gallons of water enter the tank during the time interval 0 7t ? Round your answer to the nearest gallon. (b) For 0 7t , find the time intervals during which the amount of water in the tank is decreasing. Give a reason for each answer. (c) For 0 7t , at what time t is the amount of water in the tank greatest? To the nearest gallon, compute the amount of water at this time. Justify your answer.

500

2000

1000

1500

2500

1 2 3 4 5 6 7

Page 26: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

500

1 2 3 4 5 6 7

1000

1500

2000

2500

Page 27: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

The standard description of the FTC is that

“The two central operations of calculus, differentiation and integration, are inverses of each other.” —Wikipedia

A more useful description is that the two definitions of the definite integral:•The difference of the values of an anti-derivative taken at the endpoints, [definition used by Granville (1941) and earlier authors]•The limit of a Riemann sum, [definition used by Courant (1931) and later authors]

yield the same value.

Page 28: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

2004 AB3(d)A particle moves along the y-axis so that its velocity v at time t ≥ 0 is given by v(t) = 1 – tan–1(et). At time t = 0, the particle is at y = –1. Find the position of the particle at time t = 2.

y '(t) = v(t) = 1 – tan–1(et)

y(t) = ?

Page 29: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

Velocity Time = Distance

time

velo

city

dist

a nce

Page 30: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

The Fundamental Theorem of Calculus (part 1):

If ,then f x a

b dx F b F a .)()(' xfxF

Page 31: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

Change in y-value equals

Since we know that y(0) = –1:

v t dt 1 tan 1 e t 0

2

0

2

dt 0.3607,

y 2 y 0 0.3607 1.3607

If we know an anti-derivative, we can use it to find the

value of the definite integral.

Page 32: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

All students should know how to interpret the following applications as accumulations:

Areas (sums of rectangles)

Volumes (sums of regular-shaped slices)

Displacements (sums of v(t)∙∆t)

Average values (Integrals/intervals)

BC: Arclengths (sums of hypotenuses)

BC: Polar areas (sums of sectors)

Page 33: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

Problem of the Day :

The population density of the city of Washerton decreases as you move away from the city center. In fact, it can be approximated (in people per square mile) by the function 10,000(2 – r) at a distance r miles from the city center. (a) What is the radius of the populated portion of the city? (b) A thin ring around the center of the city has thickness r and radius r. What is its area? [Hint: Imagine straightening it out to make a thin rectangular strip.] (c) What is the population of the strip in part (b)? (d) Estimate the total population of Washerton by setting up and evaluating a definite integral.

Page 34: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

The population density of the city of Washerton decreases as you move away from the city center. In fact, it can be approximated (in people per square mile) by the function 10,000(2 – r) at a distance r miles from the city center. (a) What is the radius of the populated portion of the city?

(a) r = 2 miles.

(b) A thin ring around the center of the city has thickness r and radius r. What is its area? [Hint: Imagine straightening it out to make a thin rectangular strip.]

(b) A = 2πr Δr

Page 35: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

(d) Estimate the total population of Washerton by setting up and evaluating a definite integral.

people per sq. mile sq. mil

2

0es

10,000(2 )(2 )

83,776 people

r r dr

(d)

Page 36: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

Another implication of the Fundamental Theorem (and a source of several recent problems that have caused trouble for students):

( ) ( ) (

( ) ( )

)

( )b

a

b

af x dx f b f a

f b f a f x dx

Thus, given f(a) and the rate of change of f on [a, b], you can find f(b).

Page 37: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

The Kicker in 2003 / AB-4 BC-4:

(4, –2)

(–3, 1)

–4 –2 2 4

–2

2

x

y

x

Let f be a function defined on the closed interval 3 4x with f(0) = 3. The graph of f , the derivative of f, consists of one line segment and a semicircle, as shown above. (d) Find f(–3) and f(4). Show the work that leads to your answers.

Page 38: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

3

0

4

0

( 3) (0) ( )

1 13 ( 2)( 2) ( 1)(1)2 2

92

(4) (0) ( )

3 ( 8) ( 2 )2 5

f f f x dx

f f f x dx

Page 39: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

Problem of the Day #35:

If 2( ) sin ( )F x x and F(2) = 5, find F(7).

Page 40: AP Problems Involving the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

Solve this just like the last one was solved.