Let  .
.
- a) Compute the left-hand Riemann sum approximation of  with with boxes. boxes.
- b) Compute the right-hand Riemann sum approximation of  with with boxes. boxes.
- c) Express  as a limit of right-hand Riemann sums (as in the definition of the definite integral). Do not evaluate the limit. as a limit of right-hand Riemann sums (as in the definition of the definite integral). Do not evaluate the limit.
 
| Foundations: | 
| Link to Riemann sums page | 
Solution:
(a)
| Step 1: | 
| Since our interval is ![{\displaystyle [0,3]}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/d5c9e70f7d437509d4ebedb0eaf7ada946e91a79) and we are using 3 rectangles, each rectangle has width 1. So, the left-hand Riemann sum is | 
|  . | 
|  | 
| Step 2: | 
| Thus, the left-hand Riemann sum is | 
|  . | 
(b)
| Step 1: | 
| Since our interval is ![{\displaystyle [0,3]}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/d5c9e70f7d437509d4ebedb0eaf7ada946e91a79) and we are using 3 rectangles, each rectangle has width 1. So, the right-hand Riemann sum is | 
|  . | 
|  | 
| Step 2: | 
| Thus, the right-hand Riemann sum is | 
|  . | 
(c)
| Step 1: | 
| Let  be the number of rectangles used in the right-hand Riemann sum for  . | 
| The width of each rectangle is  . | 
|  | 
|  | 
| Step 2: | 
| So, the right-hand Riemann sum is | 
|  . | 
| Now, we let  go to infinity to get a limit. | 
| So, the area of  is equal to  . | 
| Final Answer: | 
| (a)   | 
| (b)   | 
| (c)   | 
Return to Sample Exam