IB Maths AA SLTopic 5 â CalculusPaper 1 & 2~6 min read
Finding the Constant of Integration
Without extra info, integration leaves you with an unknown c. But if the question gives you one point on the curve, you can pin it down. Just substitute the coordinates and solve for c. Quick, three steps, easy marks.
đ What you need to know
Without info â indefinite integral has “+ c” (a whole family of curves).
With one point â you can find the exact value of c and pin down a single curve.
Method: integrate, substitute, solve.
Don’t leave your answer with “+ c” if extra info was given â that’s a lost mark.
How one point pins down the curve
Before vs after using a known point
Before â many curves
âuse the point
After â exact curve
one point is all you need to find c
Every “+ c” in the answer means there’s a whole family of parallel curves. The point is what locks in the right one.
The 3-step method
How to find c
Integrate the gradient function (or rate). Don’t forget + c.
Substitute the given point’s x and y into the integrated expression.
Solve the resulting equation for c, then write the final answer.
đ§
“Integrate, sub, solve”
Three words. Three steps. That’s the whole method.
Worked examples
WE 1
Basic case
The curve y = f(x) passes through (1, 5) and dy/dx = 4x. Find y in terms of x.
The graph of y = f(x) passes through (2, 7) and fâ˛(x) = 6x â 4. Find the value of f(5).
step 1 â integratef(x) = 3x² â 4x + cstep 2 â find c using (2, 7)7 = 3(4) â 4(2) + c = 12 â 8 + c â c = 3f(x) = 3x² â 4x + 3step 3 â find f(5)f(5) = 3(25) â 4(5) + 3 = 75 â 20 + 3f(5) = 58find c first, THEN evaluate at the new x-value!
WE 5
When the point IS the y-intercept
The curve y = f(x) has y-intercept â5 and dy/dx = 9x² â 2x. Find y in terms of x.
step 1 â integratey = 9xÂł/3 â 2x²/2 + c = 3xÂł â x² + cstep 2 â substitute (0, â5)y-intercept means x = 0, y = â5:â5 = 3(0)Âł â (0)² + c â c = â5step 3 â finaly = 3xÂł â x² â 5when the point is the y-intercept, c is just the y-value directly!
đĄ Top tips
Integrate, sub, solve â three quick steps, easy marks.
Always include “+ c” when integrating, even if you’ll find it later.
Read the question carefully to spot the given point â sometimes it’s “y-intercept”, sometimes “passes through (a, b)”.
If the point is the y-intercept (x = 0), then c = y-value directly â no algebra needed.
Find c first, then write the full function before answering any follow-up questions.
Check your answer by substituting the given point â you should get the right y-value.
â Common mistakes
Leaving “+ c” in your final answer when extra info was given. Find the value!
Sign errors when solving for c, especially with negative coordinates.
Substituting into fâ˛(x) instead of f(x). The point lies on the original curve, not the gradient.
Forgetting to write the full function in the final answer â just stating “c = 3” isn’t enough.
Mixing up which is x and which is y in the given point â careful with order.
Now you can find the exact antiderivative when given a point. The next note moves to definite integrals â using your GDC to compute the area under a curve between two limits.
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