2. What is calculus?
Calculus originally meant mathematics.
Derived from the Latin calx (counter) ancient Babylonians would use
pebbles to represent units, tens, hundreds, etc, on a primitive
abacus.
Later, defined as measuring varying rates of change.
3. Development of calculus over time
Period of anticipation (application without theory)
Period of development
Period of refinement
4. Period of Anticipation
Techniques were being used by mathematicians that involved infinite
processes to find areas under curves or maximize certain
quantities.
Applications of what we now call integration appeared long before
applications of differentiation.
We cannot be sure at which point in time concepts were discovered
due to sparse evidence.
5. Volume of a frustum pyramid
A papyrus dating from c. 1820 BC shows an Egyptian mathematician
working on various geometrical problems.
Among them is a solution to the calculation of the volume of a
pyramidal frustum a square pyramid with its top cut off.
We do not know how the Egyptians arrived at the formula.
6. Greek integral geometry
Whereas the Egyptians pointed to physical evidence to show that
their methods worked, the Greeks relied on geometrical
proofs.
Archimedes and his people are credited with use of infinitesimals
in their work to find areas and volumes.Coming from Latin,
infinitesimal means the th item in a series.
7. Greek integral geometry
Although not algebraically sound, the Greeks used infinitesimals
because they could supplement it with a geometrical proof.
They invented the method of exhaustion, which involves finding the
area of a shape by inscribing inside and around it polygons by
increasing the number of sides of the polygon, the difference
between the areas of the two shapes became infinitely small.
8. Method of indivisibles
Bonaventura Cavalieri (1598-1647) is credited with the discovery of
the method of indivisibles.
Using a familiar notation, we divide the plane into infinitely many
thin rectangles, each of width dx (an infinitesimal) and length
f(x).
The area under the curve
is then the sum of the area
of all the rectangles.
Well return to infinitesimals
later...
9. Greek differential geometry
Archimedes noted that the tangent to a curve at a point was equal
to the slope of the curve at that point.
The Greeks understood the
concept of limits, as shown by
their ability to find the area
between a straight line and a
parabola.
Not until the 17th Century did European mathematicians begin
discussing the idea of the derivative.
10. Indian calculus
Bhaskara II had ideas concerning infinitesimal change about what we
know as the derivative, and gave a statement that we now call
Rolles Theorem.
Parameshvara did some work on a rough Mean Value Theorem (c.
1400).
Yuktibhasa published by Jyesthadeva unusually it contained proofs
and derivations of the stated theorems (c. 1530).
11. Period of Development
Newton and Leibniz created the foundations of Calculus and brought
all of these techniques together under the umbrella of the
derivative and integral.
The methods they employed made sense, but their arguments were not
always logically sound.
Other mathematicians built on their ideas, forming the calculus we
know today.
12. Pre Newton / Leibniz
John Wallis, professor of geometry at Oxford, published
Arithmeticainfinitorum in 1655, in which he asserted that the
equation
held for all rational n (apart from -1), but only proved it for
positive integers.
This was used to find the area under the curve
and is often regarded as the first general theorem to appear in
calculus.
13. Pre Newton / Leibniz
Pierre Fermat, although best known for his work in number theory,
made several important contributions to the field of calculus,
including methods of finding maxima and minima on curves.
James Gregory proves a restricted version of the Fundamental
Theorem of Calculus in 1667, and discovered several Taylor series
expansions.
14. Isaac Newton
1643 1727
Approached calculus from a physics / geometry background he used it
in his mechanics work, but realised the importance of it as a
concept in itself.He previously studied Latin and Greek.
Did not publish any definitive papers on the subject of calculus in
the field of physics instead, most of his calculus work was
publicised through letters to colleagues, or as a sub-topic in his
other works.
15. Gottfried Leibniz
1646 1716
Prior to mathematics, Leibniz had studied fields as varied as law,
politics and metaphysics.
In 1672, Christiaan Huygens convinced him to study mathematics, as
it was a rational subject.
Leibniz was very aware of good notation, and put much thought into
the symbols he used.
16. Newtons work
Newtons university career at Cambridge was largely based around
Law.While looking at some astronomy books at the local fair in
1663, he found that he did not understand the mathematics in them
and so began his mathematical career.
The astronomy led Newton to trigonometry, which he also was not
able to grasp.
Newtons entry into calculus came from his work on the binomial
theorem and infinite series.
17. Newtons work
He graduated from Cambridge in 1664, the same year as the bubonic
plague swept across London and the country.The university colleges
remained closed for two years, and during this time he returned
home.
In these two years, from 1665 to 1666, Newton formulated the law of
gravity, developed the fundamental laws of motion, and invented
calculus.
18. Newtons work
During this period, Newton wrote the (unpublished) De Analysi per
AequationesNumeroTerminorumInfinitas, in which he outlines his
early calculus ideas.
Newton computed and tabulated the area under the curves
for varying integer n.
19. Newtons work
In general,
20. Newtons work
Using the generalised binomial theorem, we can work with rational
n, for example, n = .He obtained the series
Newton obtained an infinite series, and Newton noticed that he did
not have to start work with integrals at all; he could interpolate
the series directly.
This led him onto his development of calculus.
21. Newtons work
To compute the area under a curve,
Newtons method stated:
Start with an indefinitely small triangle whose area is a function
of x and y.
An infinitesimal increase in the value of x, changing it to x + o,
will create a new formula for the area.
Using the binomial theorem as described before, recalculate the
area.
Remove all quantities of o, as these terms multiplied by it will be
nothing in respect to the rest, leaving an algebraic
expression.
y
x
x + o
22. Newtons work
However, there was one big problem with Newtons
work, which Newton himself pointed out.
He admitted the logical limitations no matter
how small the o terms were, disregarding them wasnt
mathematically sound!
23. Newtons work
Newton was not happy with his method, in no small part due to the
infinitesimals that he strived so hard to avoid.
Newton redefined his work in terms of continual flowing motion in
his new compilation MethodusFluxionum et SerierumInfinitarum.He
attempted to form his calculations on ratios of changes.
24. Newtons work
Newton developed his theory of fluxions, the rate of generated
change over time.He used the notationfor the fluent (in flux) x.He
used this theory to make many contributions to physics, including
calculations involving the ellipses of planets orbits.
Newton wrote mainly for himself, never intending to publish.The
notation and symbols he used were often thought up on the
day.
25. Leibniz's work
Leibniz focussed on the tangent problem.Like Newton, he attempted
to view the tangent as a ratio.
Unlike Newton, he viewed it as the ratio between the x and y of the
(x,y) co-ordinates.
Therefore, he saw the integral as the sum of the x values for
infinitesimal intervals in the y values i.e. a sum of infinitely
many rectangles.
26. Leibniz's work
Leibniz's method was similar
to the method of indivisibles
employed by Cavalieri some
time earlier.
Leibniz also realised the existence of an inverse to the integral
the slope of the tangent.This was the first formal notion that the
two were connected in a strong way.
27. Leibniz's work
Leibniz viewed dx as the next point on the line after x.This didnt
make sense... but somehow it worked.
With this view, he found that
reasoning that dxdywas
infinitely small, and could be ignored.
Leibniz introduced the symbols and .
dy
x dy
y
y dx
x
dx
28. Leibniz's work
Because his use of infinitesimals seemed to make calculus work,
they were widely adopted.However, they provided conceptual
difficulties.
Much of mathematics in later years attempted to rigorize what
Newton and Leibniz had discovered more precisely, how did calculus
work without having to depend on very small quantities sometimes
zero, other time positive but small?
29. The debate
Both Newton and Leibniz seem to have invented calculus
independently, using different methods, but converging on the same
results.
Newton and Leibniz argued over the ownership of the work.Newton
claims that he thought of the ideas first, but the fact that
Leibniz was the first to publish his findings meant that his ideas
were the first to be brought to the attention of the public.
30. The debate
There have been many conspiracy theories as to what happened:
Did Newton visit Leibniz and copy his work, when he reached a
dead-end in his research?
Did Leibniz get his original ideas from Newton?
Not much can be said, due to the lack of copyright system available
for mathematics at that time.
Within the UK, the prevailing opinion in the 18th Century was that
Leibniz had plagiarised Newton.However, in modern times it is
believed that they each independently invented calculus.
31. Post Newton / Leibniz
In 1691, Michael Rolle, a self-educated mathematician, published
Rolles Theorem, a special case of the Mean Value Theorem.
In 1715, Brook Taylor invented integration by parts and gave a
formal definition for Taylor series.
32. Leonhard Euler
In Eulers three most famous textbooks, he translated Newtons ideas
into Leibnizs superior notation.
He calculated the two trigonometric power series.
(These were taken with a pinch of salt due to the notion of
convergence having not been rigourised.)
33. Leonhard Euler
Euler popularised the symbols for , e and i.
He was able to show:
, leading to the famous formula
34. Period of Refinement
Mathematicians like Cauchy and Weierstrass expanded a great deal on
the calculus already in place.
They set down precise definitions of all the work that had gone
before, to ensure that everything that they were working on was
logically accurate.
35. Augustin-Louis Cauchy
Cauchy, who worked briefly as a military engineer, saw the
importance of rigourisly defining the previous works of
calculus.
His work includes definitions of continuity, convergence, the
derivative and the integral.
Cauchys definition of a limit of a sequence:
When the values successively attributed to a particular variable
approach indefinitely a fixed value so as to differ from it by as
little as one wishes, this latter value is called the limit of the
others.
36. Augustin-Louis Cauchy
Introduced the f(x+h) method for evaluating derivatives.
He also discovered the Cauchy Convergence Criterion, a sufficient
condition for an infinite series to converge.
37. Karl Weierstrass
Often cited as the father of modern analysis.
Provided a rigorous treatment of calculus using arithmetic and
inequalities, replacing Cauchys vaguely worded definitions.
Weierstasss definition of a limit L of a sequence (an):
38. Karl Weierstrass
Many mathematicians incorrectly believed at that time that a
continuous function must be differentiable at most points (all but
finitely many points).Weierstrass provided a counter-example:
Due to his highly rigorous approach to the definitions, he was able
to go on to prove previously unproven theorems, including the
Intermediate Value Theorem and the Bolzano-Weierstrass
Theorem.
39. Bernhard Riemann
Up until now, the process of integration had been seen as a mixture
of the opposite of differentiation and the area under the
curve.
Riemann introduced the notion of the Riemann integral in the 19th
Century, in terms of a series.From this, he proved that integration
is the inverse of differentiation.
40. Summary
Weve come a long way: from finding methods that just worked like
the volume of a frustum, to formalising the relationship between
the derivative and the integral.
I havent covered all of calculus up to the present day theres still
complex calculus, different definitions of the integral (Riemann /
Lebesgue), others...
I havent touched on modern applications, but there are many!
41. Thanks for listening!