In mathematics, Frullani integrals are a specific type of improper integral named after the Italian mathematician Giuliano Frullani. The integrals are of the form
where is a function defined for all non-negative real numbers that has a limit at , which we denote by .
The following formula for their general solution holds if is continuous on , has finite limit at , and :
Proof for continuously differentiable functions
editLemmas
editThis is a simple proof of the formula under stronger assumptions than the prior assumption . The first lemma arises from the Fundamental theorem of calculus.
Lemma 1 |
The second lemma relates the partial derivatives involving variables and using the chain rule.
Lemma 2 |
The third lemma arises from the fundamental theorem of calculus.
Lemma 3 |
Proof
editBegin with the integral.
Substitute using lemma 1.
Substitute using lemma 2.
Use Tonelli’s theorem to interchange the two integrals.
Place the integral in parentheses.
Substitute using lemma 3.
Place one factor outside the integral.
Apply the logarithm integration formula.
Rewrite the logarithm expression.
Applications
editThe formula can be used to derive an integral representation for the natural logarithm by letting and :
The formula can also be generalized in several different ways.[1]
References
edit- G. Boros, Victor Hugo Moll, Irresistible Integrals (2004), pp. 98
- Juan Arias-de-Reyna, On the Theorem of Frullani (PDF; 884 kB), Proc. A.M.S. 109 (1990), 165-175.
- ProofWiki, proof of Frullani's integral.
- ^ Bravo, Sergio; Gonzalez, Ivan; Kohl, Karen; Moll, Victor Hugo (21 January 2017). "Integrals of Frullani type and the method of brackets". Open Mathematics. 15 (1). doi:10.1515/math-2017-0001. Retrieved 17 June 2020.