Single Variable Calculus: Early Transcendentals

Author:   William L. Briggs ,  Lyle Cochran ,  Lyle Cochran ,  Bernard Gillett
Publisher:   Pearson Education (US)
ISBN:  

9780321664143


Pages:   816
Publication Date:   26 March 2010
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained


Our Price $260.49 Quantity:  
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Single Variable Calculus: Early Transcendentals


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Overview

Drawing on their decades of teaching experience, William Briggs and Lyle Cochran have created a calculus text that carries the teacher’s voice beyond the classroom. That voice–evident in the narrative, the figures, and the questions interspersed in the narrative–is a master teacher leading readers to deeper levels of understanding. The authors appeal to readers’ geometric intuition to introduce fundamental concepts and lay the foundation for the more rigorous development that follows. Comprehensive exercise sets have received praise for their creativity, quality, and scope.

Full Product Details

Author:   William L. Briggs ,  Lyle Cochran ,  Lyle Cochran ,  Bernard Gillett
Publisher:   Pearson Education (US)
Imprint:   Pearson
Dimensions:   Width: 21.60cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 27.60cm
Weight:   1.442kg
ISBN:  

9780321664143


ISBN 10:   0321664140
Pages:   816
Publication Date:   26 March 2010
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Out of Print
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: Functions 1.1 Review of Functions 1.2 Representing Functions 1.3 Inverse, Exponential, and Logarithm Functions 1.4 Trigonometric Functions and Their Inverses   Chapter 2: Limits 2.1 The Idea of Limits 2.2 Definitions of Limits 2.3 Techniques for Computing Limits 2.4 Infinite Limits 2.5 Limits at Infinity 2.6 Continuity 2.7 Precise Definitions of Limits   Chapter 3: Derivatives 3.1 Introducing the Derivative 3.2 Rules of Differentiation 3.3 The Product and Quotient Rules 3.4 Derivatives of Trigonometric Functions 3.5 Derivatives as Rates of Change 3.6 The Chain Rule 3.7 Implicit Differentiation 3.8 Derivatives of Logarithmic and Exponential Functions 3.9 Derivatives of Inverse Trigonometric Functions 3.10 Related Rates   Chapter 4: Applications of the Derivative 4.1 Maxima and Minima 4.2 What Derivatives Tell Us 4.3 Graphing Functions 4.4 Optimization Problems 4.5 Linear Approximation and Differentials 4.6 Mean Value Theorem 4.7 L’Hôpital’s Rule 4.8 Antiderivatives   Chapter 5: Integration 5.1 Approximating Areas under Curves 5.2 Definite Integrals 5.3 Fundamental Theorem of Calculus 5.4 Working with Integrals 5.5 Substitution Rule   Chapter 6: Applications of Integration 6.1 Velocity and Net Change 6.2 Regions between Curves 6.3 Volume by Slicing 6.4 Volume by Shells 6.5 Length of Curves 6.6 Physical Applications 6.7 Logarithmic and exponential functions revisited 6.8 Exponential models   Chapter 7: Integration Techniques 7.1 Integration by Parts 7.2 Trigonometric Integrals 7.3 Trigonometric Substitution 7.4 Partial Fractions 7.5 Other Integration Strategies 7.6 Numerical Integration 7.7 Improper Integrals 7.8 Introduction to Differential Equations   Chapter 8: Sequences and Infinite Series 8.1 An Overview 8.2 Sequences 8.3 Infinite Series 8.4 The Divergence and Integral Tests 8.5 The Ratio and Comparison Tests 8.6 Alternating Series   Chapter 9: Power Series 9.1 Approximating Functions with Polynomials 9.2 Power Series 9.3 Taylor Series 9.4 Working with Taylor Series   Chapter 10: Parametric and Polar Curves 10.1 Parametric Equations 10.2 Polar Coordinates 10.3 Calculus in Polar Coordinates 10.4 Conic Sections

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Author Information

William Briggs has been on the mathematics faculty at the University of Colorado at Denver for twenty-three years. He received his BA in mathematics from the University of Colorado and his MS and PhD in applied mathematics from Harvard University. He teaches undergraduate and graduate courses throughout the mathematics curriculum with a special interest in mathematical modeling and differential equations as it applies to problems in the biosciences. He has written a quantitative reasoning textbook, Using and Understanding Mathematics; an undergraduate problem solving book, Ants, Bikes, and Clocks; and two tutorial monographs, The Multigrid Tutorial and The DFT: An Owner’s Manual for the Discrete Fourier Transform. He is the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM) Vice President for Education, a University of Colorado President’s Teaching Scholar, a recipient of the Outstanding Teacher Award of the Rocky Mountain Section of the Mathematical Association of America (MAA), and the recipient of a Fulbright Fellowship to Ireland.   Lyle Cochran is a professor of mathematics at Whitworth University in Spokane, Washington. He holds BS degrees in mathematics and mathematics education from Oregon State University and a MS and PhD in mathematics from Washington State University. He has taught a wide variety of undergraduate mathematics courses at Washington State University, Fresno Pacific University, and, since 1995, at Whitworth University. His expertise is in mathematical analysis, and he has a special interest in the integration of technology and mathematics education. He has written technology materials for leading calculus and linear algebra textbooks including the Instructor’s Mathematica Manual for Linear Algebra and Its Applications by David C. Lay and the Mathematica Technology Resource Manual for Thomas’ Calculus. He is a member of the MAA and a former chair of the Department of Mathematics and Computer Science at Whitworth University.

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