In calculus, an antiderivative, inverse derivative, primitive function, primitive integral or indefinite integral of a function is a differentiable function whose derivative is equal to the original function . This can be stated symbolically as .[1] [2] The process of solving for antiderivatives is called antidifferentiation (or indefinite integration), and its opposite operation is called differentiation, which is the process of finding a derivative. Antiderivatives are often denoted by capital Roman letters such as and .
Antiderivatives are related to definite integrals through the second fundamental theorem of calculus: the definite integral of a function over a closed interval where the function is Riemann integrable is equal to the difference between the values of an antiderivative evaluated at the endpoints of the interval.
In physics, antiderivatives arise in the context of rectilinear motion (e.g., in explaining the relationship between position, velocity and acceleration).[3] The discrete equivalent of the notion of antiderivative is antidifference.
The function
F(x)=\tfrac{x3}{3}
f(x)=x2
\tfrac{x3}{3}
x2
x2
\tfrac{x3}{3},\tfrac{x3}{3}+1,\tfrac{x3}{3}-2
x2
F(x)=\tfrac{x3}{3}+c
f(x)=xn
F(x)=\tfrac{xn+1
F(x)=ln|x|+c
In physics, the integration of acceleration yields velocity plus a constant. The constant is the initial velocity term that would be lost upon taking the derivative of velocity, because the derivative of a constant term is zero. This same pattern applies to further integrations and derivatives of motion (position, velocity, acceleration, and so on). Thus, integration produces the relations of acceleration, velocity and displacement:
Antiderivatives can be used to compute definite integrals, using the fundamental theorem of calculus: if is an antiderivative of the continuous function over the interval
[a,b]
Because of this, each of the infinitely many antiderivatives of a given function may be called the "indefinite integral" of f and written using the integral symbol with no bounds:
If is an antiderivative of, and the function is defined on some interval, then every other antiderivative of differs from by a constant: there exists a number such that
G(x)=F(x)+c
is the most general antiderivative of
f(x)=1/x2
(-infty,0)\cup(0,infty).
Every continuous function has an antiderivative, and one antiderivative is given by the definite integral of with variable upper boundary:for any in the domain of . Varying the lower boundary produces other antiderivatives, but not necessarily all possible antiderivatives. This is another formulation of the fundamental theorem of calculus.
There are many functions whose antiderivatives, even though they exist, cannot be expressed in terms of elementary functions (like polynomials, exponential functions, logarithms, trigonometric functions, inverse trigonometric functions and their combinations). Examples of these are
For a more detailed discussion, see also Differential Galois theory.
Finding antiderivatives of elementary functions is often considerably harder than finding their derivatives (indeed, there is no pre-defined method for computing indefinite integrals).[4] For some elementary functions, it is impossible to find an antiderivative in terms of other elementary functions. To learn more, see elementary functions and nonelementary integral.
There exist many properties and techniques for finding antiderivatives. These include, among others:
Computer algebra systems can be used to automate some or all of the work involved in the symbolic techniques above, which is particularly useful when the algebraic manipulations involved are very complex or lengthy. Integrals which have already been derived can be looked up in a table of integrals.
Non-continuous functions can have antiderivatives. While there are still open questions in this area, it is known that:
Assuming that the domains of the functions are open intervals:
[a,b]
a=x0<x1<x2<...<xn=b,
*\in[x | |
x | |
i-1 |
,xi]
F(b)-F(a)
* | |
x | |
i |
{d\overdx}f(x)=g(x)
\intg(x)dx=f(x)+C
\int1 dx=x+C
\inta dx=ax+C
\intxndx=
xn+1 | |
n+1 |
+C; n ≠ -1
\int\sin{x} dx=-\cos{x}+C
\int\cos{x} dx=\sin{x}+C
\int\sec2{x} dx=\tan{x}+C
\int\csc2{x} dx=-\cot{x}+C
\int\sec{x}\tan{x} dx=\sec{x}+C
\int\csc{x}\cot{x} dx=-\csc{x}+C
\int
1 | |
x |
dx=ln|x|+C
\intexdx=ex+C
\intaxdx=
ax | |
lna |
+C; a>0, a ≠ 1
\int
1 | |
\sqrt{a |
2-x2} dx=\arcsin\left(
x | |
a |
\right)+C
\int
1 | |
a2+x2 |
dx=
1 | \arctan\left( | |
a |
x | |
a |
\right)+C