Aspects of Integration

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A01=John W. Lee
A01=Ronald B. Guenther
advanced integration techniques
Archimedes
Author_John W. Lee
Author_Ronald B. Guenther
Bernstein Operator
Bernstein Polynomials
Bernstein's Theorem
Category=PBD
Category=PBH
Category=PBKF
Category=PBV
Cauchy Sequence
Continuous Functions
convergence theorems
Double Integrals
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
Eudoxus
Follow
Functional Analysis
Higher Dimensional Analogues
Horizontal Strip
Improper Integral
Intergral
Irrational Real Number
Iterated Integration
Lebesgue Integrable Functions
Lebesgue integral
Lebesgue's Theorem
mathematical rigor
measure theory foundations
Normed Linear Space
normed linear spaces
Properly Integrable
Rational
Rational Number System
real analysis
Real Number System
Riemann Integrable
Riemann Integrable Functions
Riemann integral
Riemann integration
Riemann Sums
Riemann's Sense
Riesz-Nagy approach
undergraduate mathematics
Weierstrass Approximation Theorem

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032481128
  • Weight: 400g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 24 Aug 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Aspects of Integration: Novel Approaches to the Riemann and Lebesgue Integrals is comprised of two parts. The first part is devoted to the Riemann integral, and provides not only a novel approach, but also includes several neat examples that are rarely found in other treatments of Riemann integration. Historical remarks trace the development of integration from the method of exhaustion of Eudoxus and Archimedes, used to evaluate areas related to circles and parabolas, to Riemann’s careful definition of the definite integral, which is a powerful expansion of the method of exhaustion and makes it clear what a definite integral really is.

The second part follows the approach of Riesz and Nagy in which the Lebesgue integral is developed without the need for any measure theory. Our approach is novel in part because it uses integrals of continuous functions rather than integrals of step functions as its starting point. This is natural because Riemann integrals of continuous functions occur much more frequently than do integrals of step functions as a precursor to Lebesgue integration. In addition, the approach used here is natural because step functions play no role in the novel development of the Riemann integral in the first part of the book. Our presentation of the Riesz-Nagy approach is significantly more accessible, especially in its discussion of the two key lemmas upon which the approach critically depends, and is more concise than other treatments.

Features

  • Presents novel approaches designed to be more accessible than classical presentations
  • A welcome alternative approach to the Riemann integral in undergraduate analysis courses
  • Makes the Lebesgue integral accessible to upper division undergraduate students
  • How completion of the Riemann integral leads to the Lebesgue integral
  • Contains a number of historical insights
  • Gives added perspective to researchers and postgraduates interested in the Riemann and Lebesgue integrals

Ronald B. Guenther is an emeritus professor in the Department of Mathematics at Oregon State University. His career began at the Marathon Oil Company where he served as an advanced research mathematician at its Denver Research Center. Most of his career was spent at Oregon State University, with visiting professorships at the Universities of Hamburg and Augsburg, and appointments at research laboratories in the United States and Canada, and at the Hahn-Meitner and Weierstrass Institutes in Berlin. His research interests include mathematically modeling deterministic systems and the ordinary and partial differential equations that arise from these models.

John W. Lee is an Emeritus Professor in the Department of Mathematics at Oregon State University, where he spent his entire career with sabbatical leaves at Colorado State University, Montana State University, and many visits as a guest of Andrzej Granas at the University of Montreal. His research interests include topological methods use to study nonlinear differential and integral equations, oscillatory properties of problems of Sturm-Liouville type and related approximation theory, and various aspects of functional analysis and real analysis, especially measure and integration.

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