

Study with the several resources on Docsity
Earn points by helping other students or get them with a premium plan
Prepare for your exams
Study with the several resources on Docsity
Earn points to download
Earn points by helping other students or get them with a premium plan
Community
Ask the community for help and clear up your study doubts
Discover the best universities in your country according to Docsity users
Free resources
Download our free guides on studying techniques, anxiety management strategies, and thesis advice from Docsity tutors
Mat 2 calculus remarks Mat 2 calculus remarks
Typology: Cheat Sheet
1 / 2
This page cannot be seen from the preview
Don't miss anything!
WARNING: In the final exam you are responsible from all the topics that were explained in the announcements. What is given below is NOT a complete list of items that may come up in the exam, but they are merely some basic points which you may find useful.
2
1
xy dxdy, or
1
Z (^) x
0
0
z dxdydz
are incorrect, but Z (^4)
2
Z (^) y
1
xy dxdy, and
1
Z (^) z
0
Z (^) y+z
z
z dxdydz
are valid expressions.
A dA^ and the volume of a 3-dimensional region E is
E dV^.
p x^2 + y^2. The substitution rule for converting a Cartesian integral into cylindrical coor- dinates is: x = r cos θ, y = r sin θ, z = z, dV = r drdθdz. One can also think of variants where the polar coordinate transformation is done on the pair (x, z) or (y, z), instead of (x, y). For example, in the first case it would be: x = r cos θ, z = r sin θ, y = y, dV = r drdθdy.
p x^2 + y^2 + z^2. The substi- tution rule for converting a Cartesian integral into spherical coordinates is:
x = ρ sin ϕ cos θ, y = ρ sin ϕ sin θ, z = ρ cos ϕ, dV = ρ^2 sin ϕ dρdϕdθ.
Recall that the range of values for ϕ (latitude) is [0, π] and for θ (longitude) it is [0, 2 π]. The set described by the equation ϕ = c is the positive z-axis when c = 0, it is the negative z-axis when c = π, and is the xy-plane when c = π/ 2. In all other cases it is a cone. For example, the cone z =
p x^2 + y^2 is given by ϕ = π/ 4 in spherical coordinates.
C f ds^ where^ f is a function defined at the points of C) are orientation- independent. That is, when evaluating these integrals you can use any parametrization of C you like, without worrying about its orientation.
C ds.
C f ds by making the following substitutions and integrating from t = a to t = b:
x = x(t), y = y(t), ds =
p (x′(t))^2 + (y′(t))^2 dt
for curves in 2 dimensions, or
x = x(t), y = y(t), z = z(t), ds =
p (x′(t))^2 + (y′(t))^2 + (z′(t))^2 dt
in 3 dimensions.
C (P dx+Qdy)^ (or^
C (P dx+Qdy^ +Rdz)^ in 3D) where P, Q and R are functions, are orientation-dependent: To evaluate these integrals correctly, you must parametrize the curve C using the orientation indicated in the question text. If you use a parametrization in the opposite direction, the result it will give will have the opposite sign of the correct result.
C (P dx^ +^ Qdy)^ are x = x(t), dx = x′(t)dt, y = y(t), dy = y′(t)dt
(in 3D one also has z = z(t) and dz = z′(t)dt). The resulting expression should be integrated from t = a to t = b.
C
F · T ds and
C
F · dr
are two alternative notations for Z
C
(P dx + Qdy)
or,
C
(P dx + Qdy + Rdz) in 3D
C
F ·dr = f (p 2 )−f (p 1 ) = f (terminal point)−f (initial point).
f (x, y) = x^2 + yx + g(y),
where g(y) is the “(partial) integrating constant”. It is a func- tion of y, since y is treated as a constant in partial differenti- ation/integration with respect to other variables. Similarly, a function f (x, y, z) satisfying, say,
fx(x, y, z) = x + y + 2z
must be of the form
f (x, y, z) =
x^2 2
where g(y, z) is the “integrating constant”.
1 + (^) n^1
n can be found by switching to the logarithm and considering
lim n→∞ ln an,
and then using the fact that
lim n→∞ an = lim n→∞ eln^ an^ = elimn→∞^ ln^ an^.
an
bn
in general.
A similar statement goes for the quotients a bnn , too.
an is certainly divergent. But IF lim an = 0 THEN THIS IS STILL NOT ENOUGH TO CONCLUDE THAT
an IS CONVERGENT. YOU MUST USE OTHER TESTS TO VERIFY CONVERGENCE OR DIVERGENCE.
np^ converges if^ p >^1 and diverges if p ≤ 1.
2 n n^2 , then^ an+1^ is NOT^
22 n+ n^2 +1 , but it is
2 2(n+1) (n + 1)^2
22 n+ n^2 + 2n + 1
The same care should be taken when doing re-indexing (index shifting).
bn in the Limit Comparison Test (LCT)? There is no fixed rule, but in many cases it is easily seen that (after ignoring the insignificant components that get dominated by the others) the term an “behaves like” a simplified expression bn, and you can use that bn in the LCT. For example, the term
an = 2 n^3 − 2 n + 6 4 n^5 + n^4 + n − 2
is essentially ≈ 2 n
3 4 n^5 =^
1 2 n^2 , which is a^ p-series term with^ p^ = 2 > 1 , hence we expect
an to converge. This is confirmed by taking bn = (^21) n 2 or bn = (^) n^12 in the LCT. Similarly, an = 5 n+n^2 4 n+ln n ≈^
5 n 4 n^ =^
4
n for large n (because n^2 and ln n are dominated by the exponential terms as n → ∞), thus we expect
an to diverge. One can take bn =
4
n in the LCT to prove this.
P (^) sin(1/n) n , for example). Also,^ sin^ x^ ≈^ x^ when^ x^ is close to 0. For example, based on this idea you can conclude that
sin
n
should be divergent (try to limit compare it with (^1) n ).