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Integration is one of the two basic operations in calculus. While differentiation has easy rules by which the derivative of a complicated function can be found by differentiating its simpler component functions, integration does not, so tables of known integrals are often useful. This page lists some of the most common antiderivatives.
Historical development of integrals
A compilation of a list of integrals (Integraltafeln) and techniques of integral calculus
was published by the German mathematician Meyer Hirsch in 1810. These tables were republished in the
United Kingdom in 1823. More extensive tables were compiled in 1858 by the Dutch mathematician David de Bierens de Haan. A new edition was published in 1862. These tables, which contain mainly integrals of elementary functions, remained in use until the middle of
the 20th century. They were then replaced by the much more extensive tables of Gradshteyn and Ryzhik.
In Gradshteyn and Ryzhik, integrals originating from the book by de Bierens are denoted by BI.
Since 1968 there is the Risch algorithm for determining indefinite integrals that can be expressed in term of elementary functions, typically using a computer algebra system. Integrals that cannot be expressed using elementary functions can be manipulated symbolically using general functions such as the Meijer G-function.
Lists of integrals
More detail may be found on the following pages for the lists of integrals:
Gradshteyn, Ryzhik, Jeffrey, Zwillinger's Table of Integrals, Series, and Products contains a large collection of results. An even larger, multivolume table is the Integrals and Series by Prudnikov, Brychkov, and Marichev (with volumes 1–3 listing integrals and series of elementary and special functions, volume 4–5 are tables of Laplace transforms). More compact collections can be found in e.g. Brychkov, Marichev, Prudnikov's Tables of Indefinite Integrals, or as chapters in Zwillinger's CRC Standard Mathematical Tables and Formulae, Bronstein and Semendyayev's Handbook of Mathematics (Springer) and Oxford Users' Guide to Mathematics (Oxford Univ. Press), and other mathematical handbooks.
Other useful resources include Abramowitz and Stegun and the Bateman Manuscript Project. Both works contain many identities concerning specific integrals, which are organized with the most relevant topic instead of being collected into a separate table. Two volumes of the Bateman Manuscript are specific to integral transforms.
There are several web sites which have tables of integrals and integrals on demand. Wolfram Alpha can show results, and for some simpler expressions, also the intermediate steps of the integration. Wolfram Research also operates another online service, the Wolfram Mathematica Online Integrator.
Integrals of simple functions
C is used for an arbitrary constant of integration that can only be determined if something about the value of the integral at some point is known. Thus each function has an infinite number of antiderivatives.
These formulas only state in another form the assertions in the table of derivatives.
Rational functions
- more integrals: List of integrals of rational functions
Exponential functions
- more integrals: List of integrals of exponential functions
Logarithms
- more integrals: List of integrals of logarithmic functions
Trigonometric functions
- more integrals: List of integrals of trigonometric functions
-
- (see integral of secant cubed)
Inverse trigonometric functions
- more integrals: List of integrals of inverse trigonometric functions
Hyperbolic functions
- more integrals: List of integrals of hyperbolic functions
Inverse hyperbolic functions
- more integrals: List of integrals of inverse hyperbolic functions
Composed functions
Absolute value functions
Special functions
Definite integrals lacking closed-form antiderivatives
There are some functions whose antiderivatives cannot be expressed in closed form. However, the values of the definite integrals of some of these functions over some common intervals can be calculated. A few useful integrals are given below.
- (see also Gamma function)
- (the Gaussian integral)
- when a > 0
- when a > 0, n is 1,2,3,... and !! is the double factorial
- when a > 0
- when a > 0, n is 1, 2, ....
- (see also Bernoulli number)
- (if n is an even integer and )
- (if is an odd integer and )
- (for integers with and , see also Binomial coefficient)
- (for real and non-negative integer, see also Symmetry)
- (for integers with and , see also Binomial coefficient)
- (for integers with and , see also Binomial coefficient)
- (where is the Gamma function)
- (where is the exponential function , and )
- (where is the modified Bessel function of the first kind)
- , , this is related to the probability density function of the Student's t-distribution)
The method of exhaustion provides a formula for the general case when no antiderivative exists:
attributed to Johann Bernoulli.
References
- I.S. Gradshteyn (И.С. Градштейн), I.M. Ryzhik (И.М. Рыжик); Alan Jeffrey, Daniel Zwillinger, editors. Table of Integrals, Series, and Products, seventh edition. Academic Press, 2007. ISBN 978-0-12-373637-6. Errata. (Several previous editions as well.)
- A.P. Prudnikov (А.П. Прудников), Yu.A. Brychkov (Ю.А. Брычков), O.I. Marichev (О.И. Маричев). Intelgrals and Series. First edition (Russian), volume 1–5, Nauka, 1981−1986. First edition (English, translated from the Russian by N.M. Queen), volume 1–5, Gordon & Breach Science Publishers/CRC Press, 1988–1992, ISBN 2-88124-097-6. Second revised edition (Russian), volume 1–3, Fiziko-Matematicheskaya Literatura, 2003.
- Daniel Zwillinger. CRC Standard Mathematical Tables and Formulae, 31st edition. Chapman & Hall/CRC Press, 2002. ISBN 1-58488-291-3. (Many earlier editions as well.)
Historical
- Meyer Hirsch, Integraltafeln, oder, Sammlung von Integralformeln (Duncker und Humblot, Berlin, 1810)
- Meyer Hirsch, Integral Tables, Or, A Collection of Integral Formulae (Baynes and son, London, 1823)
- David Bierens de Haan, Nouvelles Tables d'Intégrales définies (Engels, Leiden, 1862)
- Benjamin O. Pierce A short table of integrals - revised edition (Ginn & co., Boston, 1899)
See also
External links
Tables of integrals
Derivations
Online service
Categories: