ELi5: If the “rate of change” of a function is a tangible way to understand derivatives, what is a similar way to understand integrals?

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I know it’s the “area under the curve”, but what does that mean exactly? Is there a physical or tangible way to explain it?

I understand that a derivative is rate of change at a specific point, and something like acceleration is rate of change of speed. But how can I visualize that speed is the “integral” of acceleration? What does that mean, and how does it relate to the area underneath?

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Anonymous 0 Comments

It’s the inverse of derivative. If you use derivative to get speed from distance over time, you can use integral to get distance from speed. That’s why you need to add the constant, to tell how much you had moved before the integration period.

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