By Euler's method the <em>numerical approximate</em> solution of the <em>definite</em> integral is 4.189 648.
<h3>How to estimate a definite integral by numerical methods</h3>
In this problem we must make use of Euler's method to estimate the upper bound of a <em>definite</em> integral. Euler's method is a <em>multi-step</em> method, related to Runge-Kutta methods, used to estimate <em>integral</em> values numerically. By integral theorems of calculus we know that definite integrals are defined as follows:
∫ f(x) dx = F(b) - F(a) (1)
The steps of Euler's method are summarized below:
- Define the function seen in the statement by the label f(x₀, y₀).
- Determine the different variables by the following formulas:
xₙ₊₁ = xₙ + (n + 1) · Δx (2)
yₙ₊₁ = yₙ + Δx · f(xₙ, yₙ) (3) - Find the integral.
The table for x, f(xₙ, yₙ) and y is shown in the image attached below. By direct subtraction we find that the <em>numerical</em> approximation of the <em>definite</em> integral is:
y(4) ≈ 4.189 648 - 0
y(4) ≈ 4.189 648
By Euler's method the <em>numerical approximate</em> solution of the <em>definite</em> integral is 4.189 648.
To learn more on Euler's method: brainly.com/question/16807646
#SPJ1
Answer:
x=42.5
Step-by-step explanation:
First, start by setting up the equation
these are both same side interior angles, so they both add up to 180
(3x+10) + x = 180
4x+10 =180
subtract both sides by 10
-10 -10
4x=170
divide both sides by 4
x=42.5
f(x) - g(x)
=> (3x² + x - 3) - (x² - 5x + 1)
=> 3x² + x - 3 - x² + 5x - 1
=> 3x² - x² + x + 5x - 3 - 1
=> 2x² + 6x - 4
Answer:
Please check the explanation.
Step-by-step explanation:
Given the equation
MaReeco's rewrote equation is given by
As MaReeco subtracted 3 to the right side of the equation, which imbalanced the equation. Hence, it is not correct.
Correction:
For the next step, MaReeco should have added 3 to both sides
i.e.
Therefore, the acceptable move would have been:
Step-by-step explanation:
She does .75meters a second and her weight is 500Newtons the answer is c.
Hope this helped!