Express the limit of Riemann's Sum as a definite integral. I am lost with this one. I tried to do this yesterday but I failed. Could someone please guide me through this one? (See link or attached) http://i1084.photobucket.com/albums/j409/QRAWarrior/QAM.png
whoa we had this exact question here yesterday, i'll try and find the link
It does not show...
How are you finding these links in the first place?
my notifications, i answered an earlier part of the question
this is it, its quite far down though http://openstudy.com/study#/updates/4f9b117be4b000ae9ed08e26
Ok the problem I am having is with the second "n". I just don't know what to do with it. Our professor showed us how to work with the function f(xi)*delta x, where delta x would have an "n" in the denominator, not "n^2".
@eigenschmeigen
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