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Math 241-03, Calculus IV
Spring 2005
Time: MTRF 8-9
Location: Building 38, Room 218
Instructor: Dr.
Ben Richert
Office: Building 25, Room 325
Office phone: (75)6-1681
Office hours: M,T,F: 10-11; R: 10-11, 1-2; and by appointment.
Email: brichert@calpoly.edu
Anonymous Feedback Form: http://www.calpoly.edu/~brichert/teaching/241/feedback03.html
Course description: Math 141, 142, and
143 develop single variable calculus and the theory of vectors. In Math
241, we extend these ideas to functions of many variables. This allows
us to find tangent planes (before we found tangent lines), find density
and center of mass of surfaces with variable density (before we could
only handle lamina of constant density), find surface areas (before we
could only find surface areas for surfaces of revolution), find volumes
of spaces enclosed by surfaces (before we could only do this if the surfaces
in question were again surfaces of revolution), find the length of parametric
curves (before we could only measure arc-length), and so on. In the process
we will develop a number of interesting tools including partial derivatives,
the chain rule, Lagrange multipliers, double and triple integrals, vector
fields, the gradient vector, Green's theorem, Stokes' theorem, line integrals,
and surface integrals, to name a few.
Course home page: http://www.calpoly.edu/~brichert/teaching/241/241-03.html,
or access via Blackboard.
Text: James Stewart, Calculus, fifth
edition, Brooks/Cole Publishing, 2003.
Syllabus: We will be working through
chapters 15-17 of Stewart's Calculus in this course.
Prerequisites: Math 143.
Grades: Grades will be based on quizzes
and exams. The quizzes count for 20%, the first in-class exam counts for
20%, the second in-class exam counts for 25%, and the final counts for
35%.
Reading: Students are expected
to read the section of the text to be covered on a given day before the
lecture.
Individual Homework: Individual homework
questions will be listed on the web as we go through the semester. These
will not be collected, but will be used in the construction of quizzes
and exams.
Quizzes: There will be one quiz each
week (typically on Thursday). This quiz will usually be based on the homework,
and the intention is that completing the individual homework assignments
and looking over your solutions will be sufficient preparation. No makeup
quizzes will be given; however, your lowest quiz score will be dropped.
Exams: There will be two in-class exams
and one cumulative final. Exam 1 is scheduled for Thursday, April 21.
Exam 2 is scheduled for Friday, May 13. These dates are tentative. The
cumulative final will be held on Tuesday, June 7, from 7-10 am.
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