What is the definite integral of ln x from 0 to 1?

1 Answer
Sep 2, 2015

The integral should give you -1.

Explanation:

We have:
int_0^1ln(x)dx= by parts: =xlnx-intx1/xdx==xlnx-int1dx=xlnx-x|_0^1
=[1ln(1)-1]-[0ln(0)-0]=
But ln(0) cannot be evaluated:
=[0-1]-[?]
Considering the meaning of integral (the area described by a curve and the x axis) and the graph of your function:
graph{ln(x) [-2.375, 17.625, -8.44, 1.56]}
you can see that your function at zero continues indefinitely towards -oo giving you a never ending area!

BUT
ln(0) may not exist, but does lim_(x→0+)xln(x) exist? I think you will find it is 0 and hence the value of the definite integral is −1.
[After @George C.]