Prove that f(x)=x^{2} is integrable using superior and inferior sums

Frank Guyton

Frank Guyton

Answered question

2022-01-12

Prove that f(x)=x2 is integrable using superior and inferior sums

Answer & Explanation

lalilulelo2k3eq

lalilulelo2k3eq

Beginner2022-01-13Added 38 answers

Step 1
The P1 is a partion on [1,0] and your P2 is a partition on [0,2]. So your partition P on [1,2] should be P=P1+P2 aka:
P={tn=1, tn+1=1+1n,,t1=1n, t0=0, t1=2n},,tn=2}
You can then start from here to show
S(f,P)s(f,P)<ϵ, or
[S(f,p1)+S(f,p2)][s(f,p1)+s(f,p2)]<ϵ
Annie Gonzalez

Annie Gonzalez

Beginner2022-01-14Added 41 answers

Step 1
The key idea is, on an interval where f is monotone, the difference between the upper and lower sums with respect to an equal-length partition telescopes to ΔfΔt.
Suppose f is real-valued on [a,b], and without loss of generality assume f is non-decreasing. For each positive integer n, consider the equal-length partition
ti=a+iban for 0in,
whose subintervals all have length Δt=ban.
On the ith subinterval Ii=[ti1,ti] we have
mi=f(ti1)
Mi=f(ti)
Since the subintervals all have the same length,
S(f,P)s(f,P)=i=1nf(ti)Δti=1nf(ti1)Δt
=Δti=1n[f(ti)f(ti=1)]
=Δt[f(b)f(a)]=[f(b)f(a)]ban
This is essentially what you have with your lengthy sum, but the way the terms are expanded may be obscuring the cancellation.

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