Integration as Area Under the Curve – Practical with graphical strips.

Integration as Area Under Curve

Integration as Area Under Curve

Visualizing Riemann sums and the fundamental theorem of calculus

Explore how integration calculates the area under a curve by adjusting the number of rectangular strips. Observe how increasing the number of strips improves the approximation of the exact area!

Lower Bound (a): -2.0
Upper Bound (b): 2.0
Number of Strips (n): 8
Current Calculation:

Riemann sum approximation:

ab f(x) dx ≈ Σ f(xi) · Δx

Approximate area: 5.333

Exact area: 5.333

The Concept of Integration as Area

Key Concepts:

Integration measures the area under a curve between two points:

  • The Riemann sum approximates the area using rectangles
  • As the number of rectangles (n) increases, the approximation improves
  • In the limit as n→∞, we get the exact area under the curve
  • This is the fundamental concept behind definite integrals
Visual Interpretation:

The green rectangles show the area approximation. As you increase the number of strips:

  • The rectangles better fit the curve
  • The approximation becomes more accurate
  • The sum approaches the exact integral value

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