1 / 23

Change of Variables to Compute Double Integrals

VC.07. Change of Variables to Compute Double Integrals. Example 1: A Familiar Double Integral. Example 1: A Familiar Double Integral. Example 2: An Attempt at a Change of Variables. Detour: Working Out the Change of Variables the Right Way.

merrill
Download Presentation

Change of Variables to Compute Double Integrals

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. VC.07 Change of Variables to Compute Double Integrals

  2. Example 1: A Familiar Double Integral

  3. Example 1: A Familiar Double Integral

  4. Example 2: An Attempt at a Change of Variables

  5. Detour: Working Out the Change of Variables the Right Way

  6. Detour: Working Out the Change of Variables the Right Way

  7. Detour: Working Out the Change of Variables the Right Way

  8. Detour: Working Out the Change of Variables the Right Way

  9. Detour: Working Out the Change of Variables the Right Way

  10. The Area Conversion Factor:

  11. The Area Conversion Factor:

  12. Example 3: Fixing Example 2

  13. Summary of Change of Variables for Polar Coordinates

  14. Example 4: More With Polar Coordinates • By now you probably already asked yourself why this change of variables is useful. This was just a circle of course! We could have used A = πr2 or the Gauss-Green formula. • Hence, we should look at an example where a double integral in xy-coordinate space would be horribly messy, the boundary region is hard to parameterize for Gauss-Green, and we can’t just plug into a familiar area formula…

  15. Example 4: More With Polar Coordinates

  16. Analogy Time:

  17. Example 5: Change of Variables for Single Variable Calculus

  18. Next Up: • As I said, a change of variables isn’t just good for polar coordinates. We’ll try a few regions tomorrow that require a different change of variables with a different Jacobian determinant (area conversion factor).

  19. Example 6: Beyond Polar Coordinates

  20. Example 6: Beyond Polar Coordinates

  21. Example 7: Mathematica-Aided Change of Variables (Parallelogram Region)

  22. Example 7: Mathematica-Aided Change of Variables (Parallelogram Region)

  23. Example 7: Mathematica-Aided Change of Variables (Parallelogram Region)

More Related