integration for engineering students

PA3040D

Junior Member
Joined
Jan 30, 2021
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94
Hi everyone,
I would greatly appreciate it if someone could recommend a YouTube video series that explains integration using examples related to electronics and electrical engineering. There are many YouTube videos available on the topic of integration, but if there’s a series specifically tailored for engineering students, incorporating examples from electronics and electrical engineering, it would be much more helpful for me.

Thank you
 
It is difficult to help you with that request. It directly addresses people who already know the answer, which is quite a small sample size. Nobody else will watch dozens of videos only to find out that they are not suited. pdf files can be judged much faster and are far easier to find.

In any case, what does cause the integration to be specifically tailored to electrical engineering? The examples I have found were ordinary integrals whose relation to electronics is a bit artificial, e.g.,
or sophisticated solutions to Maxwell equations like
which are quite theory-heavy.

Hence my question: What specific examples are you looking for that are not covered by common integral calculus?
 
Yes, of course, I agree with you. It is quite difficult to find such videos. However by analyzing mathematics papers. The paper I am going to face often includes questions closely related to electrical engineering. Therefore, I decided to focus on mathematics topics that are relevant to electrical engineering, as this will help me understand the subject better.
Anyway grate thanks your advise
 
Hi everyone,
I would greatly appreciate it if someone could recommend a YouTube video series that explains integration using examples related to electronics and electrical engineering. There are many YouTube videos available on the topic of integration, but if there’s a series specifically tailored for engineering students, incorporating examples from electronics and electrical engineering, it would be much more helpful for me.

Thank you
I have solved tons of electronic and electrical engineering problems and I don't see a difference between them and calculus in terms of integration. It is only that the engineering problem is more difficult to understand. In calculus, most of the time, the problem will give you the integral and you only have to think of how to solve it with whatever technique you know while in engineering, the problem sometimes wants you to derive the integral. Therefore, setting up the integral in an engineering problem is the most difficult part, but once you have it, it is just a calculus problem.

And the funny thing is that in most of the problems including engineering, solving the calculus part is the easiest to handle.

May be you have dug deep in the field of electronic and electrical engineering and seen things we have not. Can you enlighten us by showing us an integral in engineering where it looks very different than calculus?

👽
 
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