Introduction to the line integral | Multivariable Calculus | Khan Academy

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  • Опубликовано: 2 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 410

  • @ddsslse
    @ddsslse 10 лет назад +803

    Khan the savior of university students

    • @arsindmp9202
      @arsindmp9202 5 лет назад +12

      im almost 11

    • @yewtwo
      @yewtwo 5 лет назад +47

      @@arsindmp9202 weird flex but okay

    • @brianahn7919
      @brianahn7919 5 лет назад +1

      Still now lol

    • @gerardogutierrez4911
      @gerardogutierrez4911 4 года назад +13

      jesse cole wow you’re almost 11? Omg people don’t usually do this advanced level math at that age. Are you a genius? I think you’re a genius cause I never met anyone who did calculus at 11 you must be the smartest in your town. Can you solve the integral of cos(x)? I bet you can

    • @woofle4830
      @woofle4830 4 года назад +2

      The integral of cos(x) = sin(x)... it’s basic... lmao If he’s learning line integrals, he’d know basic integrals

  • @lonelywuffy
    @lonelywuffy 8 лет назад +457

    why cant some math professors teach like this? i sit in a math class for 1.5 hours and scratch my head. i watch Sals video for twenty minutes and makes total sense.

    • @iwtwb8
      @iwtwb8 7 лет назад +35

      I've been thinking about how cool it would be to design a study where students are randomly assigned to normal instruction in math or are just shown Khan academy and given access to tutors, etc for help with homework. I'm guessing the Khan academy students would fare SO much better on standardized tests.

    • @brianahn7919
      @brianahn7919 5 лет назад +1

      Super agreed

    • @simplyexplained875
      @simplyexplained875 4 года назад

      Maybe you learn better in this environment than a classroom one?

    • @BatkoNashBandera774
      @BatkoNashBandera774 3 года назад +8

      To be an orator is an art, to be didactic is a skill. To be didactic whilst speaking eloquently results most likely from the mastery of his field. I know we idlolise teaching, and teachers -but sometimes it's not the A team who are leading the classrooms. It's a problem of pragmatics, most of us are lucky if we have two or three inspirational professors/teachers.

    • @fahadnazir8924
      @fahadnazir8924 3 года назад +1

      Exactly same

  • @inflamedwithrage92
    @inflamedwithrage92 12 лет назад +131

    I am in my 2nd year at college studying advanced Mathematics.And this is the first time that I have actually understood the reason behind doing integral f(x)dx. Teachers usually associate Calculus with mugging up the formulas and doing tons of numericals,but nobody even bothers to teach the theory behind it all.And the sort of explaination that you give cannot be found in the books.Kudos to you.This is just phenomenal.

  • @amandeepsaha
    @amandeepsaha Год назад +44

    13 years later, still the best explaination video on line integral.

    • @mzenga
      @mzenga Год назад +2

      Don’t know if it’s a good news or bad one. 😂 at least we can say math is quite firm as time passes

    • @Yuki-wn9kj
      @Yuki-wn9kj 11 месяцев назад

      agreed!

  • @isaac5990
    @isaac5990 2 года назад +11

    This video taught me in 20 minutes what my professor failed to teach me in more than 2 hours.
    Sal Khan is the best!

  • @sabretoothstudios9142
    @sabretoothstudios9142 Год назад +11

    your example of finding the area of a weirdly shaped wall just made this instantly click for me before an exam, you're my hero right now

  • @mariedrapalova7365
    @mariedrapalova7365 11 лет назад +107

    He is soooo good. Stewart's Essential Calculus can't even compare to this 10 minutes of common sense explanation. Thank you!!

    • @BatkoNashBandera774
      @BatkoNashBandera774 3 года назад +4

      But in Stewart you have a few references that will likely be useful later and if using MATLAB can include other interactive material to learn/hone mathematics more.

  • @noctua7771
    @noctua7771 3 года назад +15

    In my personal experience, you are the only teacher that has never failed to provide an intuitive understanding of math! Thank you so much!

  • @omealyjackson6795
    @omealyjackson6795 4 года назад +8

    I can’t fathom the magnitude of my appreciation and the depth of my gratitude for this.... there aren’t simply enough words to express whatever it is I feel.... thank you

  • @Bond58
    @Bond58 6 лет назад +105

    I shouldn't be paying my university as much as what I do considering the fact that I'm always on Khan Academy

  • @djfl58mdlwqlf
    @djfl58mdlwqlf 10 лет назад +31

    OMG...
    You genius...
    Not one of my professor could teach me like that.....

  • @phylton
    @phylton 12 лет назад +15

    Do you know that pleasure you get from understanding the nature of something and seeing its genius? This video fits this perfectly. Thank you, Khan Academy!

  • @lilj135z
    @lilj135z 13 лет назад +5

    I'm sitting in my computer lab at school watching this and I finally got it. My jaw dropped and I said "Oh my God." Needless to say, the person on duty for the labs was not very happy about my outburst and kicked me out

  • @yuzhewang6746
    @yuzhewang6746 5 лет назад +7

    registered to class and stay at home watching this may be a more joyful college experience

  • @sofiiadruchyna3719
    @sofiiadruchyna3719 Год назад

    I have read explanations from 3 different books and many articles trying to understand the logic behind the line integral and none of them explained it that well as you did. This makes so much sense! Thank you!!!

  • @biaaaa22
    @biaaaa22 7 лет назад +12

    Thanks so much Sal. You always reminds me why I chose to study math.

  • @turboduck2902
    @turboduck2902 8 лет назад

    I started studying engineering this year and all my teachers tend to be terrible at explaining stuff. This was perfectly explained, clear, slow enough but not boring. I love you.

  • @vd853
    @vd853 13 лет назад +4

    this makes so much sense. when i first learn it, i was just given the formula, and had to visualize the whole thing for myself, which made it even more confusing.

  • @ryoukboy1010
    @ryoukboy1010 Год назад +1

    if anyone was confused, I took the liberty of deriving this myself before watching the video.
    So we know that {ds = sqrt(dx^2+dy^2)} which Sal shows very well where he got that from. Now, our goal is to get this in terms of "t". The function f(x,y) is already in terms of "t" because f(x,y)=f(x(t),y(t)). So, how do we get "ds" in terms of "t"? (By in terms of "t" I just mean, how does it change with respect to "t").
    What I did was simply ask, how does "ds" change which respect to "t". First, ds changes with respect to "dx" and "dy". And Finally we ask, how does dx and dy change with respect to "t". If you can tell, asking by how something changes with respect to another thing is the same as asking for the derivative with respect to that thing.
    So first we asked, how does ds change with respect to "t". Which is the same as the derivative {ds/dt = sqrt(dx^2+dy^2)}, all I did was put ds over dt to solve for the derivative. Now we see that ds changes with dx and dy. And we ask, how does dx and dy change with respect to "t". Which is the same as taking the derivative. {ds/dt = sqrt(dx/dt^2 + dy/dt^2)}.
    Now for the most confusing part, we can actually move the dt from the left side to the right side by multiplying by dt. Why can we do this you may ask? Well, derivatives often behave like fractions (you can do research so I don't drag this comment out too long). Now we get something interesting when we do this. {ds = sqrt(dx/dt^2 + dy/dt^2) dt}.
    This is the moment that it should click for you. Now we can just plug in ds inside of the integral for the thing that we just derived and viola! We have the integral in terms of dt. Read this comment a few times if you find it confusing. This is what made it click for me. At this stage in Calculus you should be comfortable with manipulating the infinitesimals, like "dx" and "dy" etc...
    Good luck!

  • @GabriellaElkaim
    @GabriellaElkaim 10 лет назад +11

    I think I just understood line integrals for the first time. None of my professors ever explained it that well.

  • @fozansharfulhaque1973
    @fozansharfulhaque1973 11 месяцев назад +1

    He draws so perfectly even on a computer, Respect.

  • @edoardogribaldo1058
    @edoardogribaldo1058 Год назад +4

    you're the man! Thank you very much sir, it was mind-blowing I finally understood linear integrals!

  • @rahbarjamil6367
    @rahbarjamil6367 4 года назад +1

    I didn't understand this concept anywhere as good as here..Thanks a lot sir

  • @randomIy
    @randomIy 14 лет назад

    thank you. i usually have to teach myself calculus because i don't understand my professors so it feels nice to have someone teach me. thank you again.

  • @i_izi_gambit7395
    @i_izi_gambit7395 6 лет назад

    am viewing this in 2018,..and i must say,this is the clearest explanation av ever seen!!...so so so clear!!..thank you!!

  • @giustinoblake3686
    @giustinoblake3686 3 года назад +1

    this is actualy the best explanation of curve integrals i'v ever seen...and i'v seen o lot of them. great didactical work.

  • @kalaiselvanrajasekaran8352
    @kalaiselvanrajasekaran8352 4 года назад

    If a your searching meaning for
    Crystal clear,unambigious,vivid ....etc.Then Sal lectures will be the example to that.
    I am too much obliged and gratefull to Khan academy and Sal for thier service to student like us.

  • @angelwithashotgun5331
    @angelwithashotgun5331 9 месяцев назад

    Cannot believe this is free! Thank you so much Khan Academy!

  • @BarneyTang
    @BarneyTang 14 лет назад +1

    thank you so much. I read the textbook over and over for a couple times, and I still could not understand the concepts. The video is so intuitive that it totally blows my mind.

  • @shane12021
    @shane12021 9 лет назад +3

    Amazing. Was completely confused until I watched that! Thank you.

  • @paradox6647
    @paradox6647 Год назад

    This is the best explanation of the line integral I’ve ever seen.

  • @Mine4Craftin
    @Mine4Craftin 9 лет назад +101

    9:45, you understand us, thats why u are the best :D

    • @Peter_1986
      @Peter_1986 9 лет назад +4

      +Brecht Van de Heijning
      My math teacher in Linear Analysis is terrible, he always talks with a monotone voice and expresses absolutely no emotions whatsoever (not even annoyance), he is just a blank slate who talks almost as if he is talking loudly to himself.
      Salman Khan, on the other hand, is a great example of what a math teacher SHOULD be like - he is laidback, he undersands his "students", and he doesn't obsess over countless proofs and rigorous fluff all the time that makes no sense to beginners anyway, but always makes sure to start with examples fairly quickly.

  • @chilufyapeter4686
    @chilufyapeter4686 10 месяцев назад +1

    There's so much fun in understanding math intuitively

  • @salehjamsaljames
    @salehjamsaljames 13 лет назад +3

    MAN, I am in love with your magical voice, goes right through to my brain!

  • @Lexyvil
    @Lexyvil 2 года назад

    About time someone explains this visually for once.

  • @misana77
    @misana77 6 лет назад

    I have a calculus exam tomorrow and now I understand where this weird square root of derivatives comes from. Thanks from Russia!

  • @raqel3036
    @raqel3036 2 года назад +1

    11 years later and this is the best explanation

  • @DerUnbekannte
    @DerUnbekannte 14 лет назад

    wow.. after many many hours of listening to my professors repeatedly explaining this, I was still in a state of confusion, 19 minutes of listening to you and I can say with confidence I now understand how this works.. thank you so much!

  • @abdul-kareem4429
    @abdul-kareem4429 6 лет назад

    It's the end of 2018 almost, and this video has been very, very, very helpful to me. Thank you!

  • @lcy6434
    @lcy6434 Год назад

    Clear lots of thoughts after years esp improving idea to momentum integral with piezometer.

  • @zavutee
    @zavutee 11 лет назад

    I bow to You master Khan. You handle this way way better than my university teachers

  • @FitMindJourney-o3i
    @FitMindJourney-o3i 14 дней назад

    complex theory into simple explaination. thank you!

  • @356379783
    @356379783 10 лет назад +28

    crystal clear

  • @gugungwenya7819
    @gugungwenya7819 8 лет назад +73

    Guys i am from South Africa, when is Mr Khan's birthday? Lets do something for him world wide on his birthday?

  • @JoãoPedro-g7e5b
    @JoãoPedro-g7e5b Год назад

    If i could press the like button so many times in this video, i would press infinity times. What a great explanation!!! I hecking love you.

  • @NTMihaila
    @NTMihaila 11 лет назад +4

    Wow. This makes perfect sense. What an elegant culmination of some pretty basic principles. :D

  • @ellenlinlin
    @ellenlinlin Год назад +1

    thank you so much!!

  • @UpATree
    @UpATree 13 лет назад +6

    It's official,
    You are the greatest man alive.

  • @Jekvan
    @Jekvan 14 лет назад

    Holly tears...I think all of the lecturers around the globe want to keep the beauty of calculus to themselves,or they just get sadistic pleasure of seeing grown students literaly cry in their lectures.
    This stuff right here,this is the way it supposed to be tought.Infact,it is better to kick out all of them overpaid professors and just screen this masterpiece at classes instead.
    Thank you.Thank you thank you thank you thank you!!

  • @moths8274
    @moths8274 2 года назад

    second year physics degree. we have a nanotechnologist teaching the maths module. this is lifesaving, thank you

  • @phipgorman5677
    @phipgorman5677 4 года назад

    Thank you for making knowledge free. You are a gift. You made this and many other concepts so easy to conceptualize for me, and millions of others. I am not in college. I just like to learn. Thank you for teaching.

  • @dorol6375
    @dorol6375 Год назад +6

    Where is Grant 😢

  • @PersianAcademy
    @PersianAcademy 12 лет назад

    Do not worry, this is the future of education ... I think in 50 years universities are still going to be around, but mostly as research institutes and where you get some hands-on work done, things you cannot do behind your PC ... traditional theoretic teaching of concepts will be all online.

  • @weishien
    @weishien 12 лет назад

    its nice to see many students sharing the same problem of not understanding certain mathematical concepts over at this channel.... i don't feel alone anymore T_T

  • @elfujo6595
    @elfujo6595 10 лет назад

    Wow. Thanks. That made it so clear. Wish I could give this a million thumbs up.

  • @DesmondLumait-ix7sk
    @DesmondLumait-ix7sk 6 месяцев назад

    ❤This is more than worth all that I learnt from my teacher.

  • @mrblahhh67
    @mrblahhh67 10 лет назад

    wow just amazing how clear you get the point across

  • @mitoand9
    @mitoand9 10 лет назад

    Super well explained, this is how professors should teach it..!

  • @poppilatesTV
    @poppilatesTV 13 лет назад

    So much easirer to understand i love how you use the correct termsbut explain everythign in natural language so we can all understand it

  • @adedejiadedamola9843
    @adedejiadedamola9843 Год назад

    Big thanks to you Khan Academy,i really appreciate, to understand the basic of this concept is really a great addition to my knowledge.Thank you

  • @francisbaffour-awuahjunior3099
    @francisbaffour-awuahjunior3099 5 лет назад +1

    You're the best, thanks for helping me visualize this.

  • @erin1061
    @erin1061 13 лет назад +6

    LOVE THIS GUY! LOVE HIM!

  • @hakeemnaa
    @hakeemnaa 2 года назад

    clear explanation
    i don't know why the teachers can not explain it like this
    there is nothing is complicated here at all

  • @300483rahul
    @300483rahul 10 лет назад +11

    Great sal u must receive a noble prize am not sure if u did !!!

    • @ganeshkendre300
      @ganeshkendre300 10 лет назад +3

      but theres o nobel prize i maths....coz nobels wife had an affair wid a mathematician..

    • @stampcrab
      @stampcrab 6 лет назад +2

      You misunderstood, Rahul wants Sal to receive a noble prize, not some mere Nobel prize. I'm all for it Rahul! :D

  • @Ravikumar-wy2dj
    @Ravikumar-wy2dj 2 года назад

    Maths can only be interesting when it’s taught this way. Idk why RUclips is better than the classes offered schools and colleges.

  • @sid2day
    @sid2day 11 лет назад

    you are a legend. give this man a medal

  • @norwayte
    @norwayte 14 лет назад

    This is the best introduction into line integrals I have seen or read.
    I really looking forward for all kinds of line integrals and their interpretations. And looking for surface integrals... and Green, Stokes, Gauss.
    You are literally saving lives.

    • @mrbrohere
      @mrbrohere 3 года назад

      Are you even alive?

  • @jpijacob
    @jpijacob 12 лет назад

    you are a 100% genius. you explain it in such a simple words while others bluffing.thank you so much .

  • @sadiakhan-kl5zt
    @sadiakhan-kl5zt 4 года назад

    Thank you for making this video. It helped me during quarantine.

  • @clayragsdale7703
    @clayragsdale7703 5 лет назад

    Anotha one. Absolutely killed it on this one Sal. Mic drop

  • @RebekahParkhurst
    @RebekahParkhurst 4 года назад

    Crystal clear explanation of line integrals. Ty!

  • @ronak226
    @ronak226 7 лет назад

    best video on the internet for Line Integrals

  • @paulgiovanni1136
    @paulgiovanni1136 Год назад

    I'm not a student currently. But I'm reliving my past as a physics major then I need to redo all the calculus and differential equations. No one ever explained this to me like this. I never understood it till today

  • @itstheMAC
    @itstheMAC 13 лет назад

    These are the only videos I've ever seen with more than a hundred likes and ZERO dislikes. Impressive.

  • @koustavborah2855
    @koustavborah2855 3 года назад

    We are the luckiest generation, as we have learnt from world's best teacher, from another continent, from our home.

  • @3227998
    @3227998 5 лет назад

    Epiphany of math teaching! Period!

  • @DeathEaterLink
    @DeathEaterLink 5 лет назад

    Excellent! Very straightforward logic, great for getting that intuition.

  • @Logan-fo6kj
    @Logan-fo6kj 9 лет назад +3

    beautifully illustrated, very helpful!

  • @pakhigondhia9372
    @pakhigondhia9372 6 лет назад

    woww... u made it easy sir.. i was thinking i could never understand line integral, but u make me wrong.. thank u sooo much

  • @arijitbagchi2197
    @arijitbagchi2197 10 лет назад +17

    how can u be sooooooooo awesome at teaching!!!!

    • @ishetabhatt4636
      @ishetabhatt4636 5 лет назад

      @Thomas White I CAN'T BELIEVE YOU'VE DONE THIS.

  • @salawesome
    @salawesome 9 лет назад

    Best explanation of a line integral ever.

  • @anthonymmeek
    @anthonymmeek 5 лет назад

    Careful with your dt/dt comment at 15:00. Differentials are operators, which you probably know, but I think saying that you can "multiply them" around is not a good habit. Other than that, I think the video, concept, and examples are clear to understand the problem.

  • @hanzabass
    @hanzabass 14 лет назад

    This is mathematical delight for the layman. Thank you SO much

  • @Tharanish-z7r
    @Tharanish-z7r Год назад +1

    very very nice u r just outstanding

  • @harishdn0
    @harishdn0 11 лет назад

    This guy is awesome..!! this really helps. you will actually start enjoying math.

  • @wille2511
    @wille2511 12 лет назад

    My mind is blown!! Thanks for simplifying this!!!

  • @harjitkaur4090
    @harjitkaur4090 2 года назад

    What a way of explanation! When I ask my teacher to explain like that, they are like, we have given the formula use it and do sums :(

  • @Tiwari_57
    @Tiwari_57 3 года назад

    Masterpiece class for line integral.

  • @robertwilsoniii2048
    @robertwilsoniii2048 7 лет назад +2

    I'm convinced most calculus lecturers either 1) don't give a shit about their jobs and purposefully put little effort into preparing lectures, or 2) don't understand the material well enough themselves to explain it clearly. Because this topic is extremely simple, yet no one can seem to explain it well enough for anyone to see that it's ridiculously simple. What the hell? Lectures, just draw a freaking picture.

  • @SuperSTi5
    @SuperSTi5 14 лет назад +1

    Haha amazing, I was seriously thinking "gee, I wish he had some videos on line integrals" the day you posted these. Thanks so much.

    • @MohdSameer-rx9gj
      @MohdSameer-rx9gj 4 года назад

      How is life after 10 years!!!!

    • @mrbrohere
      @mrbrohere 3 года назад +1

      @@MohdSameer-rx9gj
      I think he's dead 😂

    • @rikthecuber
      @rikthecuber 3 года назад

      How is life after 11 years?

  • @omarhamada2932
    @omarhamada2932 10 месяцев назад

    man, you are simply the best.

  • @kentsang8549
    @kentsang8549 4 года назад

    Better than my professor in uni so much

  • @anhtuanvo93
    @anhtuanvo93 Год назад

    Very good explanation, thanks you so much

  • @halaanbar-ko1ez
    @halaanbar-ko1ez Год назад

    you're incredible , thankyou so much .

  • @ayseak_
    @ayseak_ 5 лет назад

    Great explanation together with visualisation made it clear. Thanks

  • @forestdeep8483
    @forestdeep8483 11 лет назад

    How is it that somebody can explain to me better through videos of 10-14 mins in length than my professors?? How?? how??? He makes it so clear and why can't my professors do the same thing?? He is an electrical engineer but I learned fluid dynamics more from him than my so called Professor of Aerospace Engineering.
    I credit him more than my professors as far as learning the material goes.

  • @nixonkutz3018
    @nixonkutz3018 5 лет назад +2

    12:04 remember that the "infinitesimally small" intervals dx and dy are essentially linearizing (making a straight line) of that tiny portion of the curve C. The same notion of making those tiny rectangles of width dx under the original curve. So what was an arc now becomes the straight-line hypotenuse of a triangle. Kind of a fundamental part of integral calculus IMHO.

  • @avtaras
    @avtaras 5 лет назад +6

    13:46 hahaha old fashioned phone ring xd

  • @fahadnazir8924
    @fahadnazir8924 3 года назад +1

    I want to tell one thing, this is awesome❤️

  • @petertaylor4954
    @petertaylor4954 Год назад

    Thank you Khan Academy for all you do. 🙏🏽