Part I: If f(x) is continuous and F(x) = ∫0x
f(t) dt, then F'(x) = f(x).
Part II: If f is continuous and G is an
antiderivative of f (i.e. G'(x) = f(x)), then ∫ab
f(x) dx = G(b) - G(a).
Consider a function of one variable, f(x). We saw in
our
section on integration that the area under the curve f(x) can
be written as a
Riemann integral. This yields a second function, F(x), which
gives the area under f(t) with 0 ≤ t ≤ x.
Explicitly, we write F(x) = ∫0x f(t) dt.
It turns out that there is a relationship between this area function of
f(x) and the antiderivative of f(x). The theorem
that unites the Riemann integral with the concept of antiderivative is
known as the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus.