graphs of a function and its integral

Calculus: differentials, integrals and partial derivatives.

Calculus – differentiation, integration etc. – is easier than you think. Here's a simple example: the bucket at right integrates the flow from the tap over time. The flow is the time derivative of the water in the bucket. The basic ideas are not more difficult than that. Calculus analyses things that change, and physics is much concerned with changes. For physics, you'll need at least some of the simplest and most important concepts from calculus. Fortunately, one can do a lot of introductory physics with just a few of the basic techniques.

So stick with us: differentiation really is just subtracting and dividing, and integration really is just multiplying and adding. This short introduction is no substitute, however, for a good high school calculus course: we shall take some short cuts of which mathematicians may disapprove.

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Differentiation: How rapidly does something change?

    The velocity is the rate of change of displacement. Let's look at a very simple case. The strange man in this animation is moving in a straight line at a constant speed of one metre per second. This means that, for each second he travels, his displacement from the starting position increases by 1 m.

    (An aside for physicists: velocity is a vector, meaning that it has direction as well as magnitude. So here we could say that his speed is 1 m/s but his velocity is 1 m/s towards the right. In these examples, we shall consider only motion in a straight line, so we can specify the direction simply thus: Positive velocity means going to the right, negative velocity means going to the left. By the way, the magnitude of velocity is called the speed, which we could write as |v|. Speed is a scalar, velocity is a vector. See vectors to revise.)


    When the clock strikes zero, he is at x  =  3 m. We call this his initial displacement and write x0  =  3 m.

    When the clock reads t  =  2 s, he is at x  =  5 m. So what is v? Displacement has increased by 2 m, time has increased by 2 s, so v is

      equation
    Now this is a special case, because in this example he is travelling at constant speed. Let's see how special: What if he travelled at 2 m/s for half a second, stopped for one second, then travelled at 2 m/s for another half second? He would still have travelled two metres in two seconds, so his average speed would be 1 m/s, even if he were never travelling at this speed. We signify the average of something by putting a bar over it. His average speed is written v bar symbol , pronounced 'v bar'.

graph of constant velocity
    That fraction above looks long and clumsy when written in words. We'll write x for displacement and t for time. "change in" occurs so often in physics that we replace it with the Greek letter delta, whose upper and lower case forms are Δ and δ. (In a word, δ sounds similar to the 'd' in English, so you can think of it as standing for 'difference'.) With that substitution, and remembering to use average velocity, we write:
      equation
    Now, don't get too excited, but what we have just done is called 'differentiation' or 'taking a derivative'. Yes, that's all there is to it: we subtracted to obtain a difference, and divided it by another difference. That process is called numerical differentiation, and most differentiation is numerical.

    Note the geometrical significance of taking the derivative: looking at the triangle drawn on that graph, the height is 2 m, and the base is 2 s, so the derivative is the slope of the graph. Often it is said to be the rise (here Δx) over the run (here Δt). Note too that, for this case, it doesn't matter how big or where we draw the triangle. If we made the run 0.3 s, the rise would be 0.3 m, and so on. That, however, is just for this special case, where v is constant, and so v and v bar symbol are the same. The derivative of x in this case is constant, as we show in the v(t) graph above.

Varying derivatives

    What if v is not constant? Here's a simple case in which the same bloke is accelerating forwards, so his velocity is increasing. Let's work out his velocity at any particular time t, just from the graph x(t). We want to find the slope of this curve, at different values of t, as is shown in the animation. How can we do it? Well, in most cases, and especially in the case of experimental measurement, we do the same thing that we did for the simple case: we draw a triangle and put change in displacement Δx over change in time Δt. Again, this is numerical differentiation.


graph of constant acceleration

    If we want the slope at t  =  0 s, we might take t  =  0 s and t + Δt  =  2 s. So Δt is two seconds, using the notation introduced above. But the trouble is that that gives us a triangle whose slope (the black line) is somewhat greater than the slope at t  =  0 s (the red line). In fact, the slope of the black line gives us the average velocity between 0 and 2 seconds, but that is not what we want. We can do better, in this case at least, by drawing our triangle on either side of t  =  0 s. Try it, but you'll find that that gives an overestimate, too.

    We can do better by taking a smaller value of Δt. At first, we expect the estimate to improve as we take smaller and smaller Δt. Here arises a practical problem: If we are measuring the values, there is inevitably a limit to the precision of each measurement and, as the Δt and Δx get smaller, this error becomes proportionately more important. If we are calculating x and t numerically, we face the same problem. So, in practice, we make a compromise on the size of Δt: small enough to give the local shape of the curve but large enough that the measurement or calculation errors are small. There are other tricks that we'll see below.

Analytical derivatives

    But what if we 'know' the formula for the function x(t)? I have put 'know' in quotation marks, because for anything in physics, the only things that we know are the measurements. There are only a finite number of these, so we just have a set of points on a graph. What we can do is to find a mathematical model, a formula that goes close to the points on the graph. For example, if the acceleration is constant, we might use x  =  x0 + v0t + ½at2, as we do in the chapter on constant acceleration. We can now choose whatever t we like, and calculate x to whatever precision we need, though of course the final precision will depend on how well we know x0, v0 and a, so we are still limited by measurement.

Power terms and polynomials

    Let's have a look at these terms in turn. If x  =  x0, then it's simple: no variation in x, so the derivative would be zero. What about x  =  v0t, in other words constant velocity? This is like the first example we did: the derivative is constant, and it equals v0. So, the derivative of a constant is zero, and the derivative of a term that is proportional to t is just the constant of proportionality or, in standard terms, the coefficient of t.

    But what of a term like x  =  Ct2? (In our example, C  =  a/2, but let's keep it general.) Let's make the 'run' for our slope calculation from t to (t+Δt). Then the 'rise' on the triangle will be from Ct2 to C(t+Δt)2. So the slope is

      equation
    Now let's make Δt and Δx extremely small, and we signify this by writing them as dt and dx.
      equation
    As we've said, dt is very small, and can be made smaller than anything that we could measure. So we can neglect it on the right hand side. We don't neglect it on the left hand side, because there we have the ratio of two small things, and that ratio need not be small. So here we have one useful case for taking derivatives: the derivative of Ct2 is just 2Ct.

      At this stage, if you were doing this in a mathematics school, you might start to worry about infinitesimals, and taking the limit as Δt goes to zero. I may get into trouble for pointing this out, but the universe doesn't have infinitesimals, and quantities don't go to zero in physics. Infinitesimals, like many things in mathematics, are human inventions. So, for most purposes in physics, the limit taken is just the size necessary to have mathematical precision greater than that of our measurements, or greater than that of our numerical calculation. (You really should take that mathematics course, but you I don't think you'll need infinitesimals in physics.)
    Let's summarise what we have so far:
      equation
    Let's graph these, setting the constants equal to one. We'll also omit units on the axes because, although you may find it helpful to think of the vertical axis as displacement and t as time to give a concrete example, the results are general. For that reason, we'll use y as the vertical axis from here on.

    In all of the graphs on this page, the red curve is the derivative of the purple one. It is a good exercise to compare the two, and to check that, in all cases and over the whole curve, that the red line represents the slope of the purple one. Here, for instance, the slope of y  =  1 is zero. The slope of the straight line y  =  t is obviously consant. In the third curve, you can see that the slope is negative at first, zero at t  =  0, and then becomes increasingly positive.

    graph of 1, x, x^2 and their derivatives

    Perhaps you see a pattern here? Taking a positive integer n, and expanding (t + Δt)n, you'll see that, if y   =  Ctn, the derivative of y is nCtn−1. This is often written thus:

      equation
    This result is more general: it actually holds for all real values of n, positive and negative. n  =  0 is a special case, because it gives a factor of zero on the right hand side. This will be important when we come to look at integrals, below.

Sums of terms

    If x is increasing with rate (dx/dt) and y is increasing with rate (dy/dt), what is the rate of increase in (x+y)? This is an easy one: if, over a certain time t+ Δt, x increases by Δx and y increases by Δy, then the change in (x+y) is (Δx+Δy).

    The rate of change in the sum of functions is equal to the sum of their individual rates of change. (The derivative of the sum is the sum of the derivatives.) With this unsurprising result, we can now differentiate polynomials, such as this: If

      y  =  A + Bt + Ct2 Dt3, then
      dy/dt  =  B + 2Ct + 3Dt2.

Trigonometric functions

diagram of circle and trignometry
    Sine and cos functions are important, especially in circular motion, simple harmonic motion, components of forces and other cases involving components of vectors. Fortunately, the derivatives here are simple. Let's work them out, using this diagram, which shows a segment of a circle whose radius is one unit. (We say a circle of unit radius.)

    The definition of sine of an angle uses a right angled triangle. It is the ratio of the side opposite the angle to the hypotenuse of the triangle. The definition of cosine is the other side (that adjacent to the angle) divided by the hypotenuse.

    In this diagram, first look at the triangle with blue sides. The radius is drawn at the angle θ. The vertical side is, by definition, sin θ and the horizontal side is cos θ.

    Now let's change θ by an amount Δθ: we get another radius and another triangle, shown here with two of its sides in green. By how much have we changed sin θ? In other words, what is Δ(sin θ)?

    By definition, Δ(sin θ) is the amount that in θ increases when θ increases by Δθ). So it must be (sin(θ+Δθ) − sin θ). On this diagram, Δ(sin θ) is shown as the rise of the small triangle, shown in red. (For clarity, this triangle is repeated outside the main diagram.) The run of this triangle is −Δ(cos θ). The run goes to the left in this case, so it has a negative sign. This negative sign arises because, as θ increases in this quadrant, cos θ decreases.

    Now look at the small right triangle in red. We call its hypotenuse h. Applying the definition of sine and cos, and remembering that the cos θ is decreasing, we have

      Δ(sin θ)  =  h cos φ      and      Δ(cos θ)  =   − h sin φ.
    Now let's imagine what happens to the little red triangle as Δθ becomes very small. The hypotenuse approaches more and more closely the length of the arc of the circle between the two radii (the radii are the blue hypotenuse and the green hypotenuse). From the definition* of angle (angle in radians ≡ arc/radius) and the fact that radius is one, this arc has a length Δθ. It follows that, as Δθ becomes very small, h becomes approximately Δθ. Further, h becomes closer and closer to being at a right angle to the radius. Further, the angle φ becomes closer and closer to being equal to θ.

    Again, we use the convention that dx means a value of Δx small enough to make the approximations better than our measurements. So, in this limit, and using the results of the previous paragraph (θ  =  φ and h  =  dθ for small enough values of Δθ), the equations above become

      d(sin θ)   =   dθ cos θ     and     d(cos θ)  =   − dθ sin θ
    Dividing both sides of these two equations by dθ gives two very useful results:
      equation
    graph of sin and cos and derivatives

    * Note the use of the definition: angle in radians  =  arc/radius. Consequently, the dθ in these equations must be expressed in radians. To convert degrees into radians, multiply by π and divide by 180°.

The chain rule

    Suppose we have a function z that depends on t, in a way that allows us to calculate z if we know t. And suppose that x depends on z in a similarly explicit way. Just by cancelling a factor, we can write:
      equation
    If all of these are very small quantities, then we write
      equation
    This is the chain rule of differentiation, which we use when analysing circular and simple harmonic motion.

Circular and Simple Harmonic Motion

    In both these cases, we consider uniform circular motion, in which the angle θ increases linearly with time, so (dθ/dt) is a constant, called the angular velocity ω. We can write this as
      θ  =  ωt + φ
    where ω is constant and where φ is the initial value of θ. We therefore write for the vertical displacement
      y  =  A.sin θ  =  A.sin (ωt + φ),
    When we take the time derivative of θ, we have dθ/dt  =  ω. So the chain rule gives:
      vy  =  dy/dt    =  (dy/dθ).(dθ/dt)  =  (A.cos θ).(ω)   =  A.ω.cos (ωt + φ).
    So much for maths: where, physically, does the extra factor ω come from? If we double ω, we double the rate at which the angle is increasing in circular motion or the phase is increasing in simple harmonic motion. So the time for one complete circle or cycle is halved. If the displacement goes through the same variation in half the time, then the velocity is doubled. (Differentiating one more time gives an acceleration that includes, in both cases, a factor ω 2. So, if we double ω, the range variation in velocity is twice as great, and we go through that range twice as often, so the acceleration has an extra factor of 4.)

Integration: How do the results of a variable rate add up?

graphs of a function and its integral
    Let's leave displacement time graphs for a moment, because my favourite example of an integrator is a bucket. A bucket integrates the flow of water from a tap above it. In our example, someone is turning the tap on an off in an erratic way, so that the volume flow f (measured in litres/second) is varying with time. That function f(t) is shown as the red curve in the figure.

    Let's say that the bucket already has in it a volume V0 of water and that we put the bucket under the tap (we start integrating) at time t  =  0. The tap is already on, with a flow rate f0, called the initial flow rate. Consider the first short interval Δt. The flow rate is by definition the volume per second so, in the first time Δt, a volume of approximately f0.Δt pours into the bucket. f0.Δt is shown by the first red rectangle on the top graph. "Approximately" is there because, during Δt, the flow is not constant, but varying – in our example it is increasing.

    Similarly, at any time later, the volume going into the bucket in the short interval Δt is approximately f.Δt. So, for each Δt we add a step of f.Δt to the height of the purple curve representing the volume in the bucket, as shown in the lower curve. Notice that, when the flow is high, the area f.Δt is large, so that is when the volume in the bucket increases rapidly. Note that, when the flow falls to zero (tap off), the volume is no longer increasing. And of course a fall in the V(t) curve would mean water flowing out of the bucket, which we should call negative flow into the bucket. (For example, the bucket might have a leak.)

    What is the volume Vf in the bucket at a final time tf? (The subscript f here stands for 'final', not flow.) We can find the approximate volume as

      Vf   ≈   V0 + f0.Δt + f1.Δt + f2.Δt + etc
    until we get to tf.

    The "approximately" appears because the flow varies over the time Δt. However, if we make Δt small enough, this variation becomes smaller than the limit of our precision*. As above, when Δt is small enough, we call it dt. So the equation above becomes:

      Vf   =   V0 + f0.dt + f1.dt + f2.dt + etc until we get to tf.
    So the right hand side has the initial volume, plus a long sum of terms like f.&dt. That sum is called the integral of f with respect to t. We saw earlier that differentiating was subtracting and dividing. We've now seen that integration is just multiplying and adding. So integration is the opposite of differentiation. The language we've used above includes "+ etc until we get to tf and where dt is small enough to achieve the required precision". We'd waste time (and look a bit silly) writing this every time. So instead we write it like this:
      equation
    The last term is pronounced "The integral from t = 0 to tf of f with respect to t". The integral sign is s shaped, which can stand for 'sum' and remind us that's all it is. We say we are integrating "with respect to t", because t is varying during our sum. The limits of integration (t = 0 and t = tf) tell us when we start and stop integrating – when we put the bucket under the tap and when we pull it away from the tap.

    In the way I've presented this example, V0 is a constant of integration. Integration doesn't tell you the complete answer, it only tells you how much something has changed during the process. In this case, to know the final volume in the bucket, we need to know not only the integral of the flow, but also how much was in the bucket before it started to integrate the flow. In most cases, you will need to find the constant of integration – very often by using the initial conditions, as we did here.

    Perhaps now is a good time to go back to the animations above and check that integrating the velocity (finding the area under the curve) gives the displacement.

Numerical integration

    If we had a set of numerical values for f(t) – whether experimental values or values calculated for a given mathematical function – then we could integrate just as described above: mutliple f by Δt and add. That's what my pocket calculator does when I hit the "∫" key. You've probably thought that it would be smart to space the limits of Δt on either side of the time whose value you used to get f: that's a good idea and you should remember it when you have to do a numerical integration.

    A very important practical point: when we made Δt small in differentiation, we encountered the problem that the ratio Δx/Δt became sensitive to experimental or computational error as Δt became small. This problem does not arise in multiplication. Even better, the computation errors, being sometimes positive and sometimes negative, tend to cancel out. So numerical integration is much easier and safer than numerical differentiation. The latter requires considerable caution (and that is why my calculator doesn't have a "differentiate" button).

Analytical integration

    This section might be shorter than you expect. We've mentioned above that integration is the opposite to differentiation:
      The rate at which something changes is its derivative, but
      You can recover that something by integrating the rate at which it changes.

      In differentiation, we subtract V(t) from V(t+dt) and divide by dt
      In integration we multiply f(t) by dt and add it to V(t), where f is the derivative of V with respect to t.

    So for analytical integration, we can use in reverse the tricks we established above for differentiation. Omitting constants of integration, we write
      The derivative of tn is ntn-1, so
      The integral of ntn-1 is tn
    provided that n is not equal to zero, because in that case the first equation gives us no information.

    Dividing the last equation by n, and substituting m  =  n−1 gives

    • The integral of tm is tm+1/(m+1)
    when m is not equal to −1. This is an important exception, which we'll deal with below.

The exponential function

    One very useful integral and differential is the exponential function.

    The function e x is chosen and the value of e defined so that the derivative of x is x. In other words, e x is a curve whose slope equals its value at all points. So it is also its own integral.

    On the graph, the curve (purple) shows x vs  x. In this the derivative is not shown in red, because the function and its derivative are equal. The straight line (green) is y  =  x. At x  =  1, the slope of the curve is 1  =  . This is also the value of y at x  =  1. Notice that, at x= 0, the slope of the curve is one. At x  =  −1, the slope is 1/, etc.

    Using the chain rule tells us that

    • The derivative of e ax is a.e ax, where a is a constant, and
    • The integral of e ax is e ax/a.
    To return to our point about numbers and physical quantities: Be careful about dimensions: the argument of the exponential function must be a number. Consequently, in physics, we shall often see the exponential function in equations like this one for a displacement decreasing exponentially with time:
      x  =  x0.−t/τ
    where x0 is the displacement at t  =  0 and τ, which must have the units of time, is the characteristic time that appears due to parameters in the physical system.

    This example suggests a nice problem: what is the relation ship between force and velocity for a particle of mass m whose velocity is given by

      v  =  v0.−t/τ
    where v0 is the initial velocity? And how far does it travel before coming to rest? (This situation occurs for an object moving slowly and horizontally without friction in a viscous medium. For object moving rapidly, the retarding force is approximately proportional to the square of the speed. See the integral in car physics.)
graph of exponential function
graph of 1/x and the log function

1/x and the log function

    There was an exception above, and there is one here. Obviously this can't work for m  =  −1, because that would give an integral that doesn't depend on t. The integral of 1/x is ln (x). Let's see why. (If you need to, see What is a logarithm? A brief introduction, below.) Let's put

      y  =  ln x.
    So by definition that means

      x  =  ey
    Let's take derivatives, remembering that the exponential function is its own derivative:
      dx/dy  =  ey  =  x
    Now divide both sides by x and multiply by dy to obtain

      dx/x  =  dy
    But above we defined y   =  ln  x, so

      dx/x  =  d(ln x)

    Remember this one – you'll use it a lot.

    So, in the plot at right, the purple curve is y  =  ln x. Its slope (the rate at which it is increasing) is given by the red curve (dy/dx  = 1/x). Alternatively, we could say that the purple curve rises at a rate given by the red curve (integration of a function means successively adding its value).

    For this and later sections, you'll notice that the examples use numbers x and y, rather than displacements as a function of time. Quantities with dimensions add extra constants, as we see below, and it is easier to begin without them.

The integral of sine and cos

    Above we saw that the derivative of sin θ is cos θ, and the derivative of cos θ is − sin θ. So
    • The integral of cos θ is sin θ, and
    • the integral of sin θ is − cos θ.

Techniques for integration

    You need to assemble a little collection of integrals of simple functions, including those listed immediately above. There is a range of techniques for integrating more complicated expressions. In approximate order of frequency, these are the techniques I use:

    • Change the variables to make it more closely resemble an integral I do know. Here are a couple of examples:
      • to integrate dx/(1+x), try the substitution y  =  1 + x. Here dy is equal to dx, so this gives an integral we've seen above: dy/y = d ln y.
      • to integrate x.dx(1 − x2)−1/2, which arises in different areas of physics, try the subsitution x  =  sin θ. We can now write (1 − x2)  =  cos θ, and dx  =  cos θ.dθ. Wow, that now looks much easier! (This is just one of a whole family of trigonometric substitutions.)

    • Integrate by parts. This technique comes from the derivative of the product of two functions. (This is getting beyond what we need for the material here, so see a book on calculus for more details.)

    • Look up a table of integrals! These have pages and pages of integrals, which are presumably assembled "the other way round" – i.e. the authors probably make a table of derivatives, then index it in terms of the integrals. Here's one on Wikipedia.

    • Try an algebraic mathematical package. (Where this is useful, it often makes you feel like a dill for not having seen it yourself.)

    • Integrate numerically – for many problems, this is the only way.
Go back to Physclips: mechanics with animations and video film clips
* You might ask what would happen if a quantity varied infinitely rapidly. However, physical quantities do not, so that's another thing we'll leave to the mathematicians.

Partial derivatives

    In two dimensions, when we have a function y(x), we can readily define dy/dx as the slope of the curve y(x). Here we'll use two concrete examples to illustrate partial derivatives: first we'll look at a curve y(x) that is also a function of time, i.e. y(x,t). Then we'll consider a surface in three spatal dimensions, f(x,y).

    First consider y(x,t). As a specific example, let this be the displacement y of a point on a string as a function of position on the string x, and time t. So we can now think of two different derivatives. We write them differently.

      ∂y/∂x. Think of this as dy/dx at a given, constant time, t. Imagine taking a photograph (time is constant: it has the same value for all points in the image): in the photographic image taken at time t, ∂y/∂x is the slope of the y(x) shape at the instant of the photograph.

      ∂y/∂t. Think of this as dy/dt at a given position, x. Si ∂y/∂t is just the slope of y(t), i.e. the rate at which y is changing at a particular point x on the string. (This is not the velocity of the wave, by the way).

    A wave travelling on a stretched string is a standard example, which we derive and solve in this link. The simplest solution is a travelling sine wave with amplitude A, frequency f = ω/2π and wavelength λ = 2π/k has the equation
      y  =  A sin(kx − ωt). 

    Let's show the dependence on x and t explicitly by plotting y(x,t)  =  A sin(kx − ωt) where t is a separate axis, perpendicular to x and y.

    On the graph above, the purple curve, along the x axis, is a 'snapshot' of the wave at t = 0: it is the equation yt=0  =  A sin kx. Successive snapshots at later times (yt>0  =  A sin (kx − ωt)) are shown in black. The red graph, along the t axis, shows the simple harmonic motion at x = 0: it is the equation yx=0  =  − A sin ωt. Similar graphs could of course be drawn at any value of x. The example function we are using is y  =  A sin(kx − ωt), so  

      ∂y/∂x  =  kA cos(kx − ωt),     which is the slope of the string at position x and time t, and
      ∂y/∂t  =  − ωA cos(kx − ωt),     which is the velocity of a point on the string at x and t.

    In this case, if we take the second derivatives with respect to the same variables, we get

      ∂y2/∂x2  =  − k2A sin(kx − ωt),     which is the rate of change in the slope of the string, as x varies, and
      ∂y2/∂t2  =  − ω2A sin(kx − ωt),     which is the acceleration of a point on the string.

    In the graphic below, we write these equations again in the standard notation, and set them with the time derivatives on left and space derivatives on right.

      the first and second derivatives with respect to x and to t of y=Asin(kx-omega.t)
    Using the same layout, the animation below shows these equations as functions of x by graph and as functions of t by animation.

    The reason for taking second derivatives in this case is to show the solution to the wave equation for a string. If the string has tension T and mass per unit length μ, then we show elsewhere that the wave equation is:

      ∂y2/∂t2  =  (T/μ)∂y2/∂x2  
    We have just shown that y  =  A sin(kx − ωt) is a solution to the wave equation, provided that T/μ  =  ω2/k2.

    You can see this derivation and solution in detail in this link, from which we've borrowed the animation above.

    Now let's consider the surface in three dimensions f = f(x,y). As a specific example, we could imagine that f is height or altitude of land as a function of position in the East (x) and North (y) directions, so f(x,y) is the shape of the landscape. Here is a sketch. Above a large square on the x,y plane, I've drawn the outlines of a curved section of f(x,y), bounded by four curved lines. On one corner, at the point (x,y), I've drawn a small section, with width dx and depth dy.

      f(x,y)

    How steep is this landscape? If I were constrained to the f(x) plane (i.e. if I could walk only East and West, going up or down with the landscape), then my slope would be given by df/dx, as above. But in three dimensions, the slope depends on my direction. To quantify this, let's look at the small region in the bottom corner. I'll assume that the function f is continuous and well-behaved so that, when I make dx and dy sufficiently small, this little blue square is flat – to whatever precision I require.

      f(x,y) in close-up

    The approximation that f(x,y is locally flat allows to write a simple equation for the change in height df. Suppose I walk in the x (East) direction from (x,y), ie. along the front face in the block in the sketch above. The slope of my path would be written dy/dx if we had only two dimensions. In three (or more) dimensions, different paths are possible, however, so we have a different symbol, here I write the partial derivative, partial df/dx * dx, pronounced 'duh f duh x', where the new symbol ∂ reminds me that f varies with respect to more than one variable. So, if I move a distance dx in the x direction, my altitude f increases by partial df/dx * dx. Similarly, if I had walked in the y (North) direction, I would have a different slope and my height would have increased by partial df/dx * dy.

    Let's now imagine that I walk in some arbitrary direction so that my displacement on the x,y plane is dx i + dy j. (If necessary, revise vectors.) (On the sketch above, this displacement is in the NE quadrant, but by varying the sign and magnitude of dx and dy, I could choose any direction.) If my dx and dy are sufficiently small that the blue area above is approximately flat, then I can write the equation for the change in f due to arbitrary (small) changes dx and dy:

      df = partial df/dx * dx + partial df/dy * dy.

What is a logarithm? A brief introduction.

    First let's look at exponents. If we write 102 or 103 , we mean
      102  =  10*10  =  100   and    103 = 10*10*10 = 1000.
    So the exponent (2 or 3 in our example) tells us how many times to multiply the base (10 in our example) by itself. For this page, we only need logarithms to base 10, so that's all we'll discuss. In these examples, 2 is the log of 100, and 3 is the log of 1000. If we multiply ten by itself only once, we get 10, so 1 is the log of 10, or in other words
      101  =  10.
    We can also have negative logarithms. When we write 10−2 we mean 0.01, which is 1/100, so
      10−n  =  1/10n
    Let's go one step more complicated. Let's work out the value of (102)3. This is easy enough to do, one step at a time:
      (102)3  =  (100)3  =  100*100*100  =  1,000,000  =  106.
    By writing it out, you should convince yourself that, for any whole numbers n and m,
      (10n)m  =  10nm.
    But what if n is not a whole number? Since the rules we have used so far don't tell us what this would mean, we can define it to mean what we like, but we should choose our definition so that it is consistent. The definition of the logarithm of a number a (to base 10) is this:
      10log a  =  a.
    In other words, the log of the number a is the power to which you must raise 10 to get the number a. For an example of a number whose log is not a whole number, let's consider the square root of 10, which is 3.1623..., in other words 3.16232 = 10. Using our definition above, we can write this as
      3.16232  =  (10log 3.1623)2  =  10  =  101.
    However, using our rule that (10n)m = 10nm, we see that in this case log 3.1623*2 = 1, so the log of 3.1623... is 1/2. The square root of 10 is 100.5. Now there are a couple of questions: how do we calculate logs? and Can we be sure that all real numbers greater than zero have real logs? We leave these to mathematicians (who, by the way, would be happy to give you a more rigorous treatment of exponents that this superficial account).

    A few other important examples are worth noting. 100 would have the property that, no matter how many times you multiplied it by itself, it would never get as large as 10. Further, no matter how many times you divided it into 1, you would never get as small as 1/10. Using our (10n)m = 10nm rule, you will see that 100  =  1 satisfies this, so the log of one is zero.

    In physics, we normally use natural logs. Consider the function y  =  ax, with a > 0. The larger the magnitude of a, the more steeply this quantity increases. The number e  =  2.718... has the property that the derivative of ex is just ex. This function is plotted above. Logs to base e are usually written as ln so, for instance, we may write:

      ln (ex)  =  x, and

      ln (2.718)  =  1.000.

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    title

    log10x vs x.
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