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Why is this different?

The reason that we must be careful evaluating integrals over a general region is simple. For a rectangular, the boundaries of the region (limits of integration) are all described by constant functions. For example, the region below has these boundaries:

Boundary Equation
left x = -1
right x = 3
bottom y = 1
top y = 5



Thus, the limits of integration in each of the iterated integrals are constants. What about the boundaries of the region below?



The boundaries are


Boundary Equation
left x = 0
right x = 3
bottom y = 0
top y = 4x/3

or, the boundaries could be described as


Boundary Equation
left x = 3y/4
right x = 3
bottom y = 0
top y = 4

The choice of which set of boundaries we use (they both describe the same region) influences the order of integration and vice versa.


next up previous
Next: The Key to getting Up: Integration Over Non-Rectangular Regions Previous: Integration Over Non-Rectangular Regions
Vector Calculus
8/20/1998