A aris3 New member Joined Dec 7, 2017 Messages 1 Dec 7, 2017 #1 Let f(x)=x^3+2x on [1,4]. Let epsilon = 0.05. Find a partition P(epsilon), such that U(P(epsilon),f)-L(P(epsilon),f)<epsilon
Let f(x)=x^3+2x on [1,4]. Let epsilon = 0.05. Find a partition P(epsilon), such that U(P(epsilon),f)-L(P(epsilon),f)<epsilon
stapel Super Moderator Staff member Joined Feb 4, 2004 Messages 16,550 Dec 7, 2017 #2 aris3 said: Let f(x)=x^3+2x on [1,4]. Let epsilon = 0.05. Find a partition P(epsilon), such that U(P(epsilon),f)-L(P(epsilon),f)<epsilon Click to expand... What are your thoughts? What have you tried? How far have you gotten? Where are you stuck? Please be complete. Thank you!
aris3 said: Let f(x)=x^3+2x on [1,4]. Let epsilon = 0.05. Find a partition P(epsilon), such that U(P(epsilon),f)-L(P(epsilon),f)<epsilon Click to expand... What are your thoughts? What have you tried? How far have you gotten? Where are you stuck? Please be complete. Thank you!