Welcome to My Bitesize, let's get you set up!

Add your subjects to find the right study guides, track progress and keep everything in one place.

Add my subjects
My Subjects

Using and interpreting graphs - EduqasEstimating the area under a curve - Higher

Using graphs is not just about reading off values. In real-life contexts, the intercept, gradient and area underneath the graph can have important meanings such as a fixed charge, speed or distance.

Part ofMathsAlgebra

Estimating the area under a curve - Higher

The area under a curve can be estimated by dividing it into triangles, rectangles and trapeziums.

If we have a speed-time or velocity-time graph, the distance travelled can be estimated by finding the area.

Example

The velocity of a sledge as it slides down a hill is shown in the graph.

Find the distance travelled by the sledge over its 30-second journey.

Vertical lines every 4 seconds along the horizontal axis have been added and points joined to make triangles, rectangles or trapeziums that approximate to the curve.

A graph that shows the velocity in miles per second of a sledge over time in seconds. Broken down into seven sections with labels a-g.

The areas of the shapes are:

A \(\frac{4×5}{2} = 10\)

B \(\frac{4×(5+9)}{2} = 28\)

C \(\frac{4×(9+8.5)}{2} = 35\)

D \(\frac{4×(8.5+7)}{2} = 31\)

E \(\frac{4×(7+3)}{2} = 20\)

F \(\frac{4×(3+0.5)}{2} = 7\)

G \(\frac{(0.5×2)}{2} = 0.5\)

The total area is \(10 + 28 + 35 + 31 + 20 + 7 + 0.5 = 131.5\), so the sledge travelled approximately 131.5 m.

Understanding the meaning of the area

Page 1 showed how the units can be used to identify the meaning of the gradient: by dividing the vertical axis units by the horizontal axis units.

The meaning of the area under a graph can be found by multiplying the units.

For example, for the velocity-time graph above, \( {m/s} \times {s} = \frac{\text{metres}}{\text{seconds}} \times \frac {\text{seconds}}{1} = metres\).

So the area represents distance in metres.

Example

A basic graph showing two axes: horizontal = litres per second, the vertical = Time in seconds

The units of the area will be \(\frac{\text{litres}}{\text{seconds}}\times \frac{\text{seconds}}{1} = litres\).