Revision as of 16:35, 27 November 2020 by Sun955 (Talk | contribs)

A Review on Reparametrizing

Over the past years in math, I've seen many different methods for reparametrizing variables as a way to make a complex integral easier to deal with. Essentially we just take a function of some value and differentiate it with respect to a different variable, creating newer, simpler functions. One application of this includes u-substitution, where we let an arbitrary variable (in this case "u") represent a portion of our integral. For example, let's take this integral:

$ \int {(sin{(x)})*(cos{(x)})} dx $

To solve this, we would simply let our new variable "u" equal $ sin{(x)} $ and differentiate both sides, resulting in an equation with $ du = cos{(x)} dx $. We can then proceed to use this as a substitution for dx, changing our integral to $ \int {sin{(u)} du} $, which is much easier to compute.

While u-substitution is the clearest example of parametrization, we even see it appear in surface integrals. This concept is extremely useful, especially with complex integrals, and it plays a major role in an integration technique known as Feynman's technique.

Back to Feynman Integrals

Alumni Liaison

Have a piece of advice for Purdue students? Share it through Rhea!

Alumni Liaison