CALCULUS 1 (UNIT 1)
cod. 1004542

Academic year 2017/18
1° year of course - First semester
Professor
Academic discipline
Analisi matematica (MAT/05)
Field
Discipline matematiche e informatiche
Type of training activity
Basic
56 hours
of face-to-face activities
6 credits
hub:
course unit
in

Integrated course unit module: CALCULUS 1

Learning objectives

Knowledge and understanding.

At the end of the lectures, students should have acquired knowledge and understanding of the numerical field N, Q, Z, R and C, of the numerical sequences and of the differential calculus for functions of one variable.


Applying knowledge and understanding.

By means of the classroom exercises students learn how to apply the theoretical knowledges to solve concrete problems, such as optimization problems.


Making judgements.

Students must be able to evaluate coherence and correctness of results obtained by themselves or by others.


Communication skills.

Students must be able to communicate in a clear and precise way mathematical statements in the field of study, also in a context broader than mere calculus. Through the front lectures and the assistance of the teacher, the students acquire the specific and appropriate scientific vocabulary.


Learning skills.

The student who has attended the course, is able to deepen autonomously his/her knowledge of numerical sequences, differential calculus for functions of one variable, starting from the basic and fundamental knowledges provided by the course. He/She will be also able to consult specialized textbook, even outside the topics illustrated during the lectures. This to facilitate the learning of the other activities of the degree course in Mathematics, which use notions from Mathematical Analysis.

Prerequisites

They are not required.

Course unit content

The course aim at providing students with the fundamental notions of the numerical sets and with the fundamental concepts of infinitesimal calculus for functions of one variable and of numerical sequences.

Full programme

1. Real numbers.

Axiomatic definition of real numbers, maximum, minimum, least upper and greatest lower bound; integer part and modulus of real numbers; powers, roots, n-th roots of non-negative numbers; rational and irrational numbers and their density in the set of all the real numbers; intervals, distance; neighborhoods, accumulation points, isolated points, interior points; closed sets, open sets, frontier. The principle of induction.


2. Sequences of real numbers.

The concept of numerical sequence, convergent and divergent sequences, uniqueness of the limit; infinitesimal sequences; subsequences, a criterion for the non existence of the limit of a sequence; limit of the sum, product, quotient of sequences, permanence of the sign, comparison theorems; monotone sequences; the Nepero’s number; sequences defined by recurrence.


3. Functions and limits.

One to one, surjective and bijective functions; inverse functions; graphs; monotone functions; exponential, and logarithmic functions. Limits of functions with real values, uniqueness of the limit, limits of the restrictions; limit of the sum, product, quotient of two functions; permanence of the sign, comparison theorems; right and left limits; limits of monotone functions.

4. Continuity.

The concept of continuous function, restrictions of continuous functions, composition of continuous functions; sum, product, quotient of continuous functions; examples of continuous functions; discontinuity, examples of discontinuous functions; zeroes of continuous functions defined in an interval; continuity and intervals; continuity and monotonicity; continuity of inverse functions; Weierstrass theorem.


5. Differential calculus.

Incremental ratio, derivatives, right and left derivatives; geometrical meaning of the derivative; derivation rules: derivatives of the sum, product, quotient of two functions; derivatives of composite functions and inverse functions; derivatives of elementary functions; relative maxima and minima; stationary points; connection between the monotonicity and the sign of the derivative; Rolle's theorem and Lagrange's theorem and their geometrical interpretation, Cauchy's theorem and de l'Hopital's theorem.

Bibliography

Theory
E. Acerbi, G. Buttazzo: Primo corso di Analisi Matematica, Pitagora Editore.

E. Acerbi, G. Buttazzo: Analisi Matematica ABC, Pitagora Editore.

Enrico Giusti "Analisi Matematica 1"
Boringhieri

Exercises
Enrico Giusti "Esercizi e complementi di Analisi Matematica 1" Boringhieri

Teaching methods

The course schedules 5 hours per week of lectures and classroom exercises. During the lectures the fundamental properties of the numerical sets will be illustrated and basic results of calculus for functions of one variable will be analyzed and discussed. Students will be provided also with the basic results on sequences of real numbers. The classroom exercises aim at showing how and where the abstract results can be applied to make the students understand better the relevance of what they are studying.

Assessment methods and criteria

The exam (Analisi Matematica 1 first part jointly with Analisi Matematica 1 second part) consists of a written part and an oral part in different dates.
Two evaluations in itinere are fixed: if the average of grades of these two test and the evaluation in itinere of the second part of the course Analisi Matematica 1 is not less than 15 points, the student is relieved from the written part of the exam.

The written part (or the evaluations in itinere) is based on some exercises and it is aimed at evaluating the skills of the student in applying the abstract results proposed during the course to some concrete situations.

The oral part is aimed at evaluating 1) the knowledge of the abstract results seen during the course and their proofs 2) the correct use of the mathematical terms, 3) the knowledge of those arguments which have not been included into the written test.

Other information

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