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Integral calculus

Improper integral

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Mathematical diagram illustrating an improper integral concept.

In mathematical analysis, an improper integral is a special way to add up areas under curves. Normally, we add up areas between two points on a curve. But sometimes we need to add areas over an endless distance or when the curve has sudden jumps or breaks. For these situations, we use improper integrals.

An improper Riemann integral of the first kind, where the region in the plane implied by the integral is infinite in extent horizontally. The area of such a region, which the integral represents, may be finite (as here) or infinite.

Improper integrals help with three main problems. First, they can handle distances that go on forever, like from a point to infinity. Second, they can manage functions that have sudden jumps or breaks at certain points. Third, they can handle both of these problems together. Each case needs careful handling using limits. Limits are ways to get closer and closer to a value without actually reaching it.

These integrals are important because they are used in many areas of science and engineering. For example, they help describe waves, the flow of electricity, and many natural processes with endless or unpredictable changes. By using limits, mathematicians can find exact answers even when the usual rules don’t work.

Examples

Some special cases don't follow the usual rules for adding up areas under a curve.

For example, trying to add up areas for the curve 1/x² starting from 1 all the way to infinity doesn’t work normally because the area goes on forever. But we can still find the total area by using limits, and we find the area is exactly 1.

Another example is the curve 1/√x from 0 to 1. This also doesn’t fit the normal rules because the curve shoots up really high near zero. But again, by using limits carefully, we can still find the total area, which turns out to be 2.

Sometimes, an integral can have problems at two places at once — for example, near the start of the interval and at the end. Or maybe there’s a sudden jump in the middle of the interval. Mathematicians can still work with these tricky cases by breaking them into smaller pieces and studying each piece separately.

Convergence of the integral

An improper integral converges if the limit that defines it exists. For example, we can say an improper integral equals a number L if the integrals under the limit exist for large values and the limit equals L.

Sometimes, an improper integral can diverge to infinity. In these cases, we might say the integral equals ∞ or −∞. Other times, the integral might diverge without a clear direction, meaning it does not settle to any particular value.

Types of integrals

There are different ways to find the area under a curve, called integration theories. The most common one in basic calculus is the Riemann integral. It works well for many problems but needs special handling for some cases. These special cases are called improper integrals. They happen when we try to integrate over very large intervals or with functions that grow without bound.

Another theory, the Lebesgue integral, handles these situations differently. Sometimes an integral that seems tricky in the Riemann sense becomes easy in Lebesgue, and sometimes the opposite happens. The Henstock–Kurzweil integral is another approach. It can handle all the cases that both Riemann and Lebesgue can, without needing special improper methods.

Improper Riemann integrals and Lebesgue integrals

Sometimes, we can find the value of an integral using a method called the Lebesgue integral, even when the usual way doesn’t work well. This often happens when the function we are integrating has a point where it suddenly changes a lot (a vertical asymptote) or when we are looking at values going on forever (like from 0 to infinity).

Figure 1

For example, the integral from 0 to infinity of 1/(1+x2) can be calculated using limits, and it gives the value π/2. We can also use the Lebesgue integral over the set (0, ∞) and get the same answer.

Singularities

In an improper integral, we talk about singularities. These are special points on the number line. We use limits to find the integral at these points because the normal rules don't work there. We handle them carefully with limits.

Cauchy principal value

Main article: Cauchy principal value

The Cauchy principal value is a way to understand some integrals that seem unclear at first. It uses limits to help us see what happens when we get very close to points where the function we are integrating becomes undefined or very large.

For example, when integrating a function that has a problem at zero, we look at what happens as we get very close to zero from both sides. This helps us find a value that makes sense, even though the integral, as normally defined, would not. Similar ideas can be used for integrals over very large ranges, helping us understand what happens when we stretch our limits to infinity.

Summability

Sometimes, an improper integral doesn’t have a clear answer because its limit doesn’t exist. To handle this, mathematicians use special methods to find a value anyway. These methods are called summability methods.

One common method used in studying waves and patterns is called Cesàro summation. It helps find a value for certain integrals that normally wouldn’t have one.

Multivariable improper integrals

The improper integral can also work with functions that have more than one variable. The way we define it changes a little, depending on whether we need to integrate over a very large area, like all of R2 [R^2 = log(x2 + y2)].

When integrating over unusual shapes or very large spaces, we can still find the improper integral by carefully expanding the area step by step and taking limits. For functions that become very large near certain points, we can also break the problem into smaller, easier pieces and then take limits to find the final answer.

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Improper integral, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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