This chapter is concerned with the formalism of probably the most widely used mathematical technique in the physical sciences, namely the calculus. The chapter divides into two sections. The first deals with the process of differentiation and the second with its inverse process, integration. The material covered is essential for the remainder of the book and serves as a reference. Readers who have previously studied these topics should ensure familiarity by looking at the worked examples in the main text and by attempting the exercises at the end of the chapter.
Differentiation
Differentiation is the process of determining how quickly or slowly a function varies, as the quantity on which it depends, its argument, is changed. More specifically it is the procedure for obtaining an expression (numerical or algebraic) for the rate of change of the function with respect to its argument. Familiar examples of rates of change include acceleration (the rate of change of velocity) and chemical reaction rate (the rate of change of chemical composition). Both acceleration and reaction rate give a measure of the change of a quantity with respect to time. However, differentiation may also be applied to changes with respect to other quantities, for example the change in pressure with respect to a change in temperature.
Although it will not be apparent from what we have said so far, differentiation is in fact a limiting process, that is, it deals only with the infinitesimal change in one quantity resulting from an infinitesimal change in another.
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