NATIONAL ENGINEERING UNIVERSITY
Faculty of Mechanical Engineering
SYLLABUS
I. GENERAL INFORMATION
SUBJECT Integral Calculus
CODE BMA02
PRE-REQUISITES BMA01 Differential Calculus
ACADEMIC DEPARTMENT General Studies
CONDITION Mandatory
ACADEMIC CYCLE 2018-2
CREDITS 5
THEORETICAL HOURS 4 hours per week
PRACTICAL HOURS / LABORATORY: 2 hours per week
RATING SYSTEM G
COURSE PROFESSOR Edwin Tello Godoy,
Manuel Kurokawa Warriors
Victor Huanca Sullca
II. COURSE SUMMARY
This course is designed for second-semester students.
university studies because they acquire knowledge and skills
basics that will enable them to perform effectively in their later studies
and they will also be able to acquire a general overview of Integral Calculus.
This subject takes a modern approach to the aspects of Calculus.
Integral, which will allow them to obtain an adequate understanding and comprehension of
the variations that occur in different events and phenomena
that occur in the sciences, engineering, and in nature, so that they can
to induce the origin of such variations, thereby acquiring the foundations
fundamental and necessary that will allow them to extrapolate their knowledge to other
subjects that are taught in their professional training, within the scientific context and
current technological.
The course covers the following contents:
Antiderivative indefinite integral. Integration methods.
The definite integral. Areas of flat figures.
The improper integral. Convergence criteria.
Applications of the definite integral: areas, volumes, arc length.
Taylor polynomials. Remainder formula: integral case.
Av. Túpac Amaru No. 210, Lima 25, Peru
482-3643
NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF ENGINEERING
Faculty of Mechanical Engineering
Sequences and series. Taylor series.
First-order differential equations.
III. COMPETENCIES
The student:
1. Evaluate the interpretations and properties establishing their usefulness and
commitment to applications to real-life problems.
2. Describe natural and/or physical processes using mathematical models
in which the process of integration takes place, appreciating the
their influence in science and engineering, respecting diversity
cultural and the ecological aspect.
3. Develop deductive, inductive, critical, and creative thinking; the
effectiveness and efficiency through the applied variable changes in the
various methods of integration; in problem solving
related to your career.
4. Demonstrates their ability to analyze and synthesize by performing calculations in the
various problems applied to their career, directing their actions of
recognition of the values inherent to your specialty.
IV. UNITS OF LEARNING
CHAPTER 1: THE ANTIDERIVATIVE INTEGRATION METHODS / 15 HOURS
El operador derivada. / Definición. / Propiedad fundamental. / La inversa
(right) of the derivative operator. / Interpretation: The antiderivative, the
primitiva. / Integral indefinida. / Propiedades. / Antiderivadas de funciones
elementary: Table. / Immediate integrals. / Methods of integration.
Change of variable. / Integration by parts and trigonometric substitution
hyperbolic. / Integration of rational functions: By decomposition into
partial fractions. / Reduction or recurrence formulas. / Integration
of rational and irrational functions Euler substitutions. / Integration
of binomial functions: Chebyshev Method. / Integration of functions
rational numbers in sine and cosine.
CHAPTER 2: THE DEFINITE INTEGRAL
The integral as the limit of a sum: Upper and lower sum. / Definition.
Properties. / Interpretation of the definite integral. / Calculation of the area as
limit of an approximation. / Fundamental theorems of calculus. /
Avenue Túpac Amaru No. 210, Lima 25, Peru
482-3643
NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF ENGINEERING
Faculty of Mechanical Engineering
Mean Value Theorem and Intermediate Value Theorem. / Non-integrable functions. / The
definition of the natural logarithm function and its relationship with the number e.
Support applications for various disciplines of the respective specialty.
CHAPTER 3: IMPROPER INTEGRALS / 9 HOURS
Definition.
species. / Principal value of improper integrals of the third kind. /
Criterios de convergencia. / Funciones gamma y Beta. / Propiedades. /
Support applications for various disciplines of the respective specialty.
CHAPTER 4: APPLICATIONS OF THE DEFINITE INTEGRAL / 18 HOURS
Areas of flat regions determined by two or more curves in
rectangular, polar, and parametric coordinates. / Arc length in
rectangular, polar, and parametric coordinates. / Volume of solids of
revolution: Method of the disk, ring, and cylindrical shell. / Volume of
solids: Method of cross sections. / Method of sections
planas paralelas conocidas. / Área de superficies de revolución. / Teorema
From Pappus. / Taylor polynomials. / Study of the error through integrals. /
Support applications for various disciplines of the respective specialty.
CHAPTER 5: SEQUENCES AND SERIES AND TAYLOR SERIES / 15 HOURS
Sequences.
Properties. / Numerical series. / Properties. / Notable series:
Geometric.
Convergence criteria: Comparison and Limit Comparison. / Of the ratio
the quotient. / From the root. / From Raabe. / From the integral. / Absolute convergence.
/ Propiedad. / Series de términos alternados. / Criterio de Leibniz. / Series de
powers. / Radius of convergence. / Differentiation and integration. / The series of
Taylor. / Applications: Calculation of limits, integrals. / Support applications.
to various disciplines of the respective specialty.
CHAPTER 6: FIRST ORDER DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS / 18 HOURS
Definition.
general and singular. / Initial value problem. / Resolution of equations
first order differentials: Separable variables. / Homogeneous.
Exact and reducible to exact (integrating factor). / Linear and reducible to
Av. Túpac Amaru No. 210, Lima 25, Peru
Fax 482-3643 / Central UNI 481-1070 (513)
NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF ENGINEERING
Faculty of Mechanical Engineering
linear: Bernoulli, Ricatti. / Lagrange and Clairaut equations. / Applications
support for various disciplines of the respective specialty.
V. METHODOLOGY
In-person learning method, in which the teacher deduces and induces the
theoretical bases, supplemented with preferably related applications
to the respective specialty. Ongoing academic tutoring on a weekly basis
according to after-school schedules.
VI. EVALUATION FORMULA
Evaluation System 'G'
Number of practices or graded assignments five (05)
Final grade of the course is calculated as follows:
PF= (EP+EF+PP)/3
EP: Partial Exam (Weight 1)
Final Exam (Weight 1)
PP: Average of Practices (Weight 1)
VII. BIBLIOGRAPHY
HOSTETLER – EDWARDS. Calculation with analytical geometry. Volume I and II.
Ed. Mc Graw-Hill. 2009.
Claudio RUIZ. Calculation of a Variable. Prentice Hall Hispanoamericana
SA. 1998.
3. KUDRIAVTSEV. Course in mathematical analysis. Ed. MIR. Moscow 1989.
4. HAASER – LASALLE–SULLIVAN. Introduction to the analysis. Volume I. Ed.
Trillas. 1970.
5. BOYCE DE PRIMA. Differential equations and boundary value problems
border. Fourth edition. Ed. Limus Willey.
6. ZILL – CULLEN. Differential equations with application of model. Seventh
edition. Ed. Cengage Learning.
7. KREYSZIG Ervin. Advanced Mathematics for Engineering. Volume I. Ed.
Limusa.
Av. Túpac Amaru No. 210, Lima 25, Peru
Fax 482-3643 / Central UNI 481-1070 (513)