Integral/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 17:51, 11 September 2009
- See also changes related to Integral, or pages that link to Integral or to this page or whose text contains "Integral".
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- An elementary proof that 22 over 7 exceeds π [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Calculus [r]: The elementary study of real (or complex) functions involving derivatives and integration. [e]
- Complex analysis [r]: Field of mathematics, precisely of mathematical analysis, that studies those properties which characterize functions of complex variables. [e]
- Computer algebra system [r]: Software program enabling manipulation of mathematical expressions in symbolic form. [e]
- Derivative [r]: The rate of change of a function with respect to its argument. [e]
- Enthalpy [r]: Energy function of thermodynamic system equal to internal energy plus pV (pressure times volume). [e]
- Entire function [r]: is a function that is holomorphic in the whole complex plane. [e]
- Finite and infinite [r]: The distinction between bounded and unbounded in size (number of elements, length, area, etc.) [e]
- Gamma function [r]: A mathematical function that extends the domain of factorials to non-integers. [e]
- Jacobian [r]: Determinant of the matrix whose ith row lists all the first-order partial derivatives of the function ƒi(x1, x2, …, xn). [e]
- Lambert W function [r]: Used to solve equations in which the unknown appears both outside and inside an exponential function or a logarithm. [e]
- Measure (mathematics) [r]: Systematic way to assign to each suitable subset a number, intuitively interpreted as the size of the subset. [e]
- Series (mathematics) [r]: A sequence of numbers defined by the partial sums of another infinite sequence. [e]
- Sine [r]: In a right triangle, the ratio of the length of the side opposite an acute angle (less than 90 degrees) and the length of the hypotenuse. [e]
- Trigonometric function [r]: Function of an angle expressed as the ratio of two of the sides of a right triangle that contains that angle; the sine, cosine, tangent, cotangent, secant, and cosecant. [e]