Calculus (Book): Difference between revisions
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| <nowiki>*</nowiki>I 4.10 || Miscellaneous exercises involving induction || 44 | | <nowiki>*</nowiki>I 4.10 || Miscellaneous exercises involving induction || 44 | ||
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! colspan="3" | | ! colspan="3" | 1. THE CONCEPTS OF INTEGRAL CALCULUS | ||
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| 1 || | | 1.1 || The basic ideas of Cartesian geometry || 48 | ||
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| 2 || | | 1.2 || Functions. Informal description and examples || 50 | ||
|- | |- | ||
| 3 || | | 1.3 || Functions. Formal definition as a set of ordered pairs || 53 | ||
|- | |- | ||
| 4 || | | 1.4 || More examples of real functions || 54 | ||
|- | |||
| 1.5 || Exercises || 56 | |||
|- | |||
| 1.6 || The concept of area as a set function || 57 | |||
|- | |||
| 1.7 || Exercises || 60 | |||
|- | |||
| 1.8 || Intervals and ordinate sets || 60 | |||
|- | |||
| 1.9 || Partitions and step functions || 61 | |||
|- | |||
| 1.10 || Sum and product of step functions || 63 | |||
|- | |||
| 1.11 || Exercises || 63 | |||
|- | |||
| 1.12 || The definition of the integral for step functions || 64 | |||
|- | |||
| 1.13 || Properties of the integral of a step function || 66 | |||
|- | |||
| 1.14 || Other notations for integrals || 69 | |||
|- | |||
| 1.15 || Exercises || 70 | |||
|- | |||
| 1.16 || The integral of more general functions || 72 | |||
|- | |||
| 1.17 || Upper and lower integrals || 74 | |||
|- | |||
| 1.18 || The area of an ordinate set expressed as an integral || 75 | |||
|- | |||
| 1.19 || Informal remarks on the theory and technique of integration || 75 | |||
|- | |||
| 1.20 || Monotonic and piecewise monotonic functions. Definitions and examples || 76 | |||
|- | |||
| 1.21 || Integrability of bounded monotonic functions || 77 | |||
|- | |||
| 1.22 || Calculation of the integral of a bounded monotonic function || 79 | |||
|- | |||
| 1.23 || Calculation of the integral \(\int_0^b x^p dx\) when \(p\) is a positive integer || 79 | |||
|- | |||
| 1.24 || The basic properties of the integral || 80 | |||
|- | |||
| 1.25 || Integration of polynomials || 81 | |||
|- | |||
| 1.26 || Exercises || 83 | |||
|- | |||
| 1.27 || Proofs of the basic properties of the integral || 84 | |||
|- | |- | ||
! colspan="3" | PART II: INTUITIVE GEOMETRY | ! colspan="3" | PART II: INTUITIVE GEOMETRY |
Revision as of 15:48, 20 September 2021
Calculus | |
Information | |
---|---|
Author | Tom Apostol |
Language | English |
Publisher | Wiley |
Publication Date | 16 January 1991 |
Pages | 666 |
ISBN-10 | 0471000051 |
ISBN-13 | 978-0471000051 |
The textbook Calculus by Tom Apostol introduces calculus.
Table of Contents
Chapter/Section # | Title | Page # |
---|---|---|
I. INTRODUCTION | ||
Part 1: Historical Introduction | ||
I 1.1 | The two basic concepts of calculus | 1 |
I 1.2 | Historical background | 2 |
I 1.3 | The method of exhaustion for the area of a parabolic segment | 3 |
*I 1.4 | Exercises | 8 |
I 1.5 | A critical analysis of the Archimedes' method | 8 |
I 1.6 | The approach to calculus to be used in this book | 10 |
Part 2: Some Basic Concepts of the Theory of Sets | ||
I 2.1 | Introduction to set theory | 11 |
I 2.2 | Notations for designating sets | 12 |
I 2.3 | Subsets | 12 |
I 2.4 | Unions, intersections, complements | 13 |
I 2.5 | Exercises | 15 |
Part 3: A set of Axioms for the Real-Number System | ||
I 3.1 | Introduction | 17 |
I 3.2 | The field axioms | 17 |
*I 3.3 | Exercises | 19 |
I 3.4 | The order axioms | 19 |
*I 3.5 | Exercises | 21 |
I 3.6 | Integers and rational numbers | 21 |
I 3.7 | Geometric interpretation of real numbers as points on a line | 22 |
I 3.8 | Upper bound of a set, maximum element, least upper bound (supremum) | 23 |
I 3.9 | The least-Upper-bound axiom (completeness axiom) | 25 |
I 3.10 | The Archimedean property of the real-number system | 25 |
I 3.11 | Fundamental properties of the supremum and infimum | 26 |
*I 3.12 | Exercises | 28 |
*I 3.13 | Existence of square roots of nonnegative real numbers | 29 |
*I 3.14 | Roots of higher order. Rational powers | 30 |
*I 3.15 | Representation of real numbers by decimals | 30 |
Part 4: Mathematical Induction, Summation Notation, and Related Topics | ||
I 4.1 | An example of a proof by mathematical induction | 32 |
I 4.2 | The principle of mathematical induction | 34 |
*I 4.3 | The well-ordering principle | 34 |
I 4.4 | Exercises | 35 |
*I 4.5 | Proof of the well-ordering principle | 37 |
I 4.6 | The summation notation | 37 |
I 4.7 | Exercises | 39 |
I 4.8 | Absolute values and the triangle inequality | 41 |
I 4.9 | Exercises | 43 |
*I 4.10 | Miscellaneous exercises involving induction | 44 |
1. THE CONCEPTS OF INTEGRAL CALCULUS | ||
1.1 | The basic ideas of Cartesian geometry | 48 |
1.2 | Functions. Informal description and examples | 50 |
1.3 | Functions. Formal definition as a set of ordered pairs | 53 |
1.4 | More examples of real functions | 54 |
1.5 | Exercises | 56 |
1.6 | The concept of area as a set function | 57 |
1.7 | Exercises | 60 |
1.8 | Intervals and ordinate sets | 60 |
1.9 | Partitions and step functions | 61 |
1.10 | Sum and product of step functions | 63 |
1.11 | Exercises | 63 |
1.12 | The definition of the integral for step functions | 64 |
1.13 | Properties of the integral of a step function | 66 |
1.14 | Other notations for integrals | 69 |
1.15 | Exercises | 70 |
1.16 | The integral of more general functions | 72 |
1.17 | Upper and lower integrals | 74 |
1.18 | The area of an ordinate set expressed as an integral | 75 |
1.19 | Informal remarks on the theory and technique of integration | 75 |
1.20 | Monotonic and piecewise monotonic functions. Definitions and examples | 76 |
1.21 | Integrability of bounded monotonic functions | 77 |
1.22 | Calculation of the integral of a bounded monotonic function | 79 |
1.23 | Calculation of the integral \(\int_0^b x^p dx\) when \(p\) is a positive integer | 79 |
1.24 | The basic properties of the integral | 80 |
1.25 | Integration of polynomials | 81 |
1.26 | Exercises | 83 |
1.27 | Proofs of the basic properties of the integral | 84 |
PART II: INTUITIVE GEOMETRY | ||
Chapter 5: Distance and Angles | ||
1 | Distance | 107 |
2 | Angles | 110 |
3 | The Pythagoras theorem | 120 |
Chapter 6: Isometries | ||
1 | Some standard mappings of the plane | 133 |
2 | Isometries | 143 |
3 | Composition of isometries | 150 |
4 | Inverse of isometries | 155 |
5 | Characterization of isometries | 163 |
6 | Congruences | 166 |
Chapter 7: Area and Applications | ||
1 | Area of a disc of radius r | 173 |
2 | Circumference of a circle of radius r | 180 |
PART III: COORDINATE GEOMETRY | ||
Chapter 8: Coordinates and Geometry | ||
1 | Coordinate systems | 191 |
2 | Distance between points | 197 |
3 | Equation of a circle | 203 |
4 | Rational points on a circle | 206 |
Chapter 9: Operations on Points | ||
1 | Dilations and reflections | 213 |
2 | Addition, subtraction, and the parallelogram law | 218 |
Chapter 10: Segments, Rays, and Lines | ||
1 | Segments | 229 |
2 | Rays | 231 |
3 | Lines | 236 |
4 | Ordinary equation for a line | 246 |
Chapter 11: Trigonometry | ||
1 | Radian measure | 249 |
2 | Sine and cosine | 252 |
3 | The graphs | 264 |
4 | The tangent | 266 |
5 | Addition formulas | 272 |
6 | Rotations | 277 |
Chapter 12: Some Analytic Geometry | ||
1 | The straight line again | 281 |
2 | The parabola | 291 |
3 | The ellipse | 297 |
4 | The hyperbola | 300 |
5 | Rotation of hyperbolas | 305 |
PART IV: MISCELLANEOUS | ||
Chapter 13: Functions | ||
1 | Definition of a function | 313 |
2 | Polynomial functions | 318 |
3 | Graphs of functions | 330 |
4 | Exponential function | 333 |
5 | Logarithms | 338 |
Chapter 14: Mappings | ||
1 | Definition | 345 |
2 | Formalism of mappings | 351 |
3 | Permutations | 359 |
Chapter 15: Complex Numbers | ||
1 | The complex plane | 375 |
2 | Polar form | 380 |
Chapter 16: Induction and Summations | ||
1 | Induction | 383 |
2 | Summations | 388 |
3 | Geometric series | 396 |
Chapter 17: Determinants | ||
1 | Matrices | 401 |
2 | Determinants of order 2 | 406 |
3 | Properties of 2 x 2 determinants | 409 |
4 | Determinants of order 3 | 414 |
5 | Properties of 3 x 3 determinants | 418 |
6 | Cramer's Rule | 424 |
Index | 429 |