Math question
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Guest
Math question
What does it mean that e^x² can't be integrated? How would one find the area under the curve then, only by approximate integration (ex: Simpson's rule, etc)?
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Freakaloin
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[xeno]Julios
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[xeno]Julios
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http://www.walterzorn.com/grapher/grapher_e.htm
if u ask it to plot e^(x^2) you'll see your answer I think.
Seems like the area is infinite.
same with e^x^2 (different from above, but still infinite)
if u ask it to plot e^(x^2) you'll see your answer I think.
Seems like the area is infinite.
same with e^x^2 (different from above, but still infinite)
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[xeno]Julios
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Nightshade
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It can be integrated, it just doesn't have a clean, closed-form solution. You have to use mathematical jiggery-pokery to integrate it. I don't recall the technique for e^x^2, but I know that for e^(-(x^2+y^2)) you can switch to polar coordinates and fairly easily inegrate it by substitution. There's another trick you have to pull to complete it, but it escapes me at the moment.
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HM-PuFFNSTuFF
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