Unit 9.5 – Integrating Vector-Valued Functions BC ONLY
AP® Calculus BC | Antiderivatives and Initial Value Problems
Why This Matters: Integration of vector-valued functions reverses differentiation! Just as we integrate to find position from velocity, we integrate vector functions component-wise. This is crucial for solving motion problems where you know acceleration or velocity and need to find the position. This topic appears on every BC exam!
📐 The Antiderivative (Indefinite Integral)
Indefinite Integral Formula
For \(\vec{r}(t) = \langle x(t), y(t) \rangle\):
where \(\vec{C} = \langle C_1, C_2 \rangle\) is a constant vector
Key Insight:
Integrate component-wise! Just like differentiation, integration of vectors is done separately for each component. Don't forget the constant vector!
🔢 The Definite Integral
Definite Integral Formula
If \(\vec{R}(t)\) is an antiderivative of \(\vec{r}(t)\), then:
📝 Note: For definite integrals, there's no constant vector because it cancels out when evaluating at the bounds!
🎯 Initial Value Problems
SOLVING FOR POSITION FROM VELOCITY
If \(\vec{v}(t)\) is velocity and \(\vec{r}(t_0) = \vec{r}_0\) is initial position:
Use initial condition to find \(\vec{C}\):
If \(\vec{a}(t)\) is acceleration and \(\vec{v}(t_0) = \vec{v}_0\) is initial velocity:
Use initial velocity to find \(\vec{C}\)
🔗 The Integration Chain
From Acceleration to Position:
Step 1: Given \(\vec{a}(t)\) and \(\vec{v}(t_0) = \vec{v}_0\)
Find \(\vec{C}_1\) using initial velocity
Step 2: Given \(\vec{v}(t)\) and \(\vec{r}(t_0) = \vec{r}_0\)
Find \(\vec{C}_2\) using initial position
📖 Comprehensive Worked Examples
Example 1: Basic Indefinite Integral
Problem: Find \(\int \langle 2t, 3t^2 \rangle \, dt\).
Solution:
Integrate each component:
ANSWER: \(\langle t^2, t^3 \rangle + \vec{C}\)
Example 2: Definite Integral
Problem: Evaluate \(\int_0^1 \langle 6t, 4t^3 \rangle \, dt\).
Find antiderivative:
Evaluate at bounds:
Example 3: Finding Position from Velocity
Problem: A particle has velocity \(\vec{v}(t) = \langle \cos t, \sin t \rangle\) and initial position \(\vec{r}(0) = \langle 1, 0 \rangle\). Find \(\vec{r}(t)\).
Step 1: Integrate velocity
Step 2: Use initial condition
Step 3: Final answer
Example 4: From Acceleration to Position
Problem: Given \(\vec{a}(t) = \langle 0, -g \rangle\) (gravity), \(\vec{v}(0) = \langle v_0, 0 \rangle\), and \(\vec{r}(0) = \langle 0, h_0 \rangle\), find position.
Step 1: Find velocity
Using \(\vec{v}(0) = \langle v_0, 0 \rangle\):
Step 2: Find position
Using \(\vec{r}(0) = \langle 0, h_0 \rangle\):
This is projectile motion! (horizontal and vertical components)
📋 Properties of Vector Integration
📊 Complete Formula Reference
| Type | Formula | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Indefinite Integral | \(\int \vec{r}(t)\,dt = \langle \int x(t)\,dt, \int y(t)\,dt \rangle + \vec{C}\) | Include constant vector |
| Definite Integral | \(\int_a^b \vec{r}(t)\,dt = \vec{R}(b) - \vec{R}(a)\) | No constant needed |
| From Velocity | \(\vec{r}(t) = \int \vec{v}(t)\,dt + \vec{C}\) | Use initial position for \(\vec{C}\) |
| From Acceleration | \(\vec{v}(t) = \int \vec{a}(t)\,dt + \vec{C}\) | Use initial velocity for \(\vec{C}\) |
💡 Essential Tips & Strategies
✅ Success Strategies:
- Integrate component-wise: Each component separately
- Don't forget constant vector: \(\vec{C} = \langle C_1, C_2 \rangle\) for indefinite
- Use initial conditions: To find constant vector
- Two-step process: Acceleration → velocity → position
- Check your work: Differentiate to verify
- Write as vector: Use \(\langle \, \rangle\) notation
- Each component independent: Integrate separately
- Units matter: Position, velocity, acceleration have different units
🔥 Common Scenarios:
- Constant acceleration: \(\vec{a} = \langle a_x, a_y \rangle\) → parabolic path
- Gravity only: \(\vec{a} = \langle 0, -g \rangle\) → projectile motion
- Circular motion: Trig functions in velocity
- Initial value problems: Always given initial position or velocity
❌ Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Mistake 1: Forgetting the constant vector in indefinite integrals
- Mistake 2: Not using initial conditions to find constants
- Mistake 3: Mixing up which constant goes with which component
- Mistake 4: Forgetting to integrate both components
- Mistake 5: Wrong integration (power rule errors)
- Mistake 6: Not subtracting vectors correctly in definite integrals
- Mistake 7: Confusing velocity with position
- Mistake 8: Sign errors (especially with gravity)
- Mistake 9: Forgetting negative sign in trig integrals
- Mistake 10: Not simplifying final answer
📝 Practice Problems
Solve these:
- Find \(\int \langle e^t, t^2 \rangle \, dt\).
- Evaluate \(\int_0^2 \langle 3t^2, 6t \rangle \, dt\).
- Given \(\vec{v}(t) = \langle 2t, 3 \rangle\) and \(\vec{r}(0) = \langle 1, 2 \rangle\), find \(\vec{r}(t)\).
- Given \(\vec{a}(t) = \langle 0, -10 \rangle\), \(\vec{v}(0) = \langle 5, 0 \rangle\), \(\vec{r}(0) = \langle 0, 0 \rangle\), find \(\vec{r}(t)\).
Answers:
- \(\langle e^t, \frac{t^3}{3} \rangle + \vec{C}\)
- \(\langle 8, 12 \rangle\)
- \(\vec{r}(t) = \langle t^2 + 1, 3t + 2 \rangle\)
- \(\vec{r}(t) = \langle 5t, -5t^2 \rangle\)
✏️ AP® Exam Success Tips
What AP® Graders Look For:
- Show component integration: Integrate each component
- Include constant vector: For indefinite integrals
- Use initial conditions: Show how you found constants
- Set up equation: \(\vec{r}(t_0) = \vec{R}(t_0) + \vec{C}\)
- Solve for constant: Show algebra
- Write final answer: As a vector
- Check dimensions: Each component separately
- Simplify: Combine like terms
💯 Exam Strategy:
- Identify what you're given (acceleration, velocity, or position)
- Identify what you need to find
- Integrate component-wise
- Include constant vector for indefinite
- Use initial condition to find constants
- Substitute constants back
- Write final answer as vector
- Verify by differentiating (if time)
⚡ Quick Reference Guide
VECTOR INTEGRATION ESSENTIALS
Indefinite Integral:
Definite Integral:
Motion Chain:
- \(\vec{a}(t)\) → integrate → \(\vec{v}(t)\) (use \(\vec{v}_0\))
- \(\vec{v}(t)\) → integrate → \(\vec{r}(t)\) (use \(\vec{r}_0\))
Remember:
- Integrate each component separately!
- Include \(\vec{C}\) for indefinite
- Use initial conditions to find \(\vec{C}\)
Master Vector Integration! Integration of vector-valued functions is done component-wise: \(\int\vec{r}(t)\,dt = \langle\int x(t)\,dt, \int y(t)\,dt\rangle + \vec{C}\) where \(\vec{C} = \langle C_1, C_2\rangle\) is the constant vector. For definite integrals: \(\int_a^b\vec{r}(t)\,dt = \vec{R}(b) - \vec{R}(a)\) (no constant). Motion problems: given acceleration, integrate to get velocity (use initial velocity for constant); given velocity, integrate to get position (use initial position for constant). Two-step process: \(\vec{a} \to \vec{v} \to \vec{r}\). Each integration adds one constant vector—find using initial conditions. Properties: linearity, constant multiple, sum/difference all work component-wise. Common application: projectile motion with \(\vec{a} = \langle 0, -g\rangle\). Verify answers by differentiating. This is guaranteed BC content—appears on every exam! Practice initial value problems until automatic! 🎯✨