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The integral of acceleration with respect to time is velocity. The integral of velocity with respect to time is position.

What is the integral of position with respect to time, and what does it mean?

Please explain so that your answer is understandable by someone who took calculus I.

Mike Pierce
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    We just had this question a scant few days ago... The only thing I could come up with was an unusual quantity related to pressure. Basically, there is no appropriate meaning in the physical world. – abiessu Feb 02 '16 at 13:47
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    Just out of curiosity: why do you think that the integral of position should have any meaning at all? – 5xum Feb 02 '16 at 13:48
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    At least if you divide this integral by the time span of integration, you obtain the object's average position ... – Hagen von Eitzen Feb 02 '16 at 13:50
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    @10Replies "Everything has a meaning" is a pretty strong statement to throw around. I don't know, maybe it does. But I don't think we can just assume that. I find it entirely plausible that some mathematical concepts have no "meaning" in physics. – 5xum Feb 02 '16 at 13:53
  • @HagenvonEitzen: but that's the main problem with this particular integral: it can't be taken to have a valuable meaning without something extra applied to it... The units are relatively sane, but we don't have (or currently know of) a use for the quantity as-is. – abiessu Feb 02 '16 at 13:54
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    @5xum In theory, the integral of position could have a meaning. There is no reason not to ask the internet. – 10 Replies Feb 02 '16 at 13:56
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    @10Replies: I bet if the same question were asked on physics.SE there would be some discussion of the comparison between $\text{m$\cdot$ s}$ and $\text{kg$\cdot$ s}$ (or is that $\text{kg$\cdot$ m}$?) – abiessu Feb 02 '16 at 13:59
  • @10Replies OK, that's a good point. I'm not bothered with you saying "this could have a meaning, I wonder if it does". I was compelled to comment because I feel your question is more like "I know this has a meaning, tell me what it is!" – 5xum Feb 02 '16 at 14:00
  • Suppose the answer is some quantity termed x, now its differentiation gives us the position of the object at a time, but position of a object at a time depends on that object only and other quantities like velocity, acceleration are defined in terms of it. – Cloverr Feb 02 '16 at 14:14

4 Answers4

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$\newcommand{\Reals}{\mathbf{R}}\newcommand{\Vec}[1]{\mathbf{#1}}$tl; dr: It's true that "velocity is the derivative of position", but "acceleration is the derivative of velocity" is not true in the same sense: The notion of velocity is independent of arbitrary coordinate changes, but acceleration isn't; you have to equip space with "extra structure" before you can make sense of acceleration (which becomes the "covariant derivative" of velocity). In this framework, "integral of position" doesn't even have mathematical meaning; there's no way to add positions.


Caveat: I don't know how to express these ideas without going beyond the normal high school curriculum. However, I've tried to factor out the technicalities and deeper material as web links.

Let's first take a closer look at the implicit premises:

  1. Velocity is the derivative of position.

  2. Acceleration is the derivative of velocity.

Despite what we teach in elementary calculus, these statements are not on an equal footing.

In elementary calculus and physics, our model of space is $\Reals^{n}$, the Cartesian space whose points are labeled by ordered $n$-tuples of real numbers. Our model of time is $\Reals$, and an interval $I$ of real numbers represents "an interval of time". The position of a point particle during an interval $I$ is modeled by a continuous (often smooth) mapping $\Vec{x}:I \to \Reals^{n}$, which we unconsciously "decompose into component functions": $$ \Vec{x}(t) = \bigl(x_{1}(t), x_{2}(t), \dots, x_{n}(t)\bigr),\quad t \in I. \tag{1} $$

If the position of our particle is continuously-differentiable, we define the velocity to be $$ \Vec{x}'(t) = \bigl(x_{1}'(t), x_{2}'(t), \dots, x_{n}'(t)\bigr),\quad t \in I. \tag{2a} $$ If the position is twice continuously-differentiable, we define the acceleration to be $$ \Vec{x}''(t) = \bigl(x_{1}''(t), x_{2}''(t), \dots, x_{n}''(t)\bigr),\quad t \in I. \tag{3a} $$

Closer inspection leads us to a more cautious viewpoint: The Cartesian coordinates we've taken for granted are not intrinsic to space; they're extra structure we imposed. In that spirit, we should ask whether the preceding definitions depend on the choice of coordinates.

Remarkably, velocity "transforms linearly (i.e., like a tensor) under change of coordinates". Acceleration does not.

To see why, let $\phi$ represent a coordinate transformation, and write $\Vec{y} = \phi(\Vec{x})$ for the coordinate representation of our particle's position in the "new" coordinates. By the (multivariable) chain rule, $$ \Vec{y}'(t) = D\phi(\Vec{x})\, \Vec{x}'(t). \tag{2b} $$ The coordinate representation of the velocity of our particle in the new system is a linear function of the coordinate representation in the old system.

By contrast, differentiating (2b) and using the product rule gives $$ y''(t) = D\phi(\Vec{x})\, \Vec{x}''(t) + \bigl[D\bigl(D\phi(\Vec{x})\bigr) \Vec{x}'(t)\bigr] \Vec{x}'(t). \tag{3b} $$ The first term on the right is the "pleasant" part, which transforms like a tensor; the second term involves second derivatives of the coordinate change, and is not linear in $\Vec{x}'$. If acceleration of a particle is to transform like a tensor, we must either

  • Restrict the set of "allowable" changes of coordinate, or

  • Modify our notion of differentiation to cancel the second term.

The approach of elementary calculus and physics may be viewed as fixing the Euclidean metric and permitting only changes of coordinate that preserve this extra structure. If $\phi$ is a rigid (Euclidean) motion, then the first derivative $D\phi$ is a constant field of linear transformations, and the second derivative vanishes, so (3b) becomes $$ \Vec{y}''(t) = D\phi(\Vec{x})\Vec{x}''(t). $$

The approach of coordinate-free mechanics, and of general relativity, is to fix a Riemannian metric, and to replace the componentwise derivative with covariant differentiation. (Compare the second term on the right in (3b) with the second partials of $\Psi$ appearing in the Wikipedia entry on Christoffel symbols.)

To summarize the preceding discussion:

  • In elementary calculus and physics, position, velocity, and acceleration are all modeled by ordered $n$-tuples of real numbers, i.e., by points/vectors in $\Reals^{n}$.

  • When one looks more closely, a position of a point particle is modeled by a point in a smooth $n$-manifold $M$; a velocity is an element of the tangent bundle of $M$; an acceleration is either

    1. An element of the second tangent bundle $T(TM)$ (if we impose no additional structure on $M$), or

    2. An element of $TM$ (if we use a connection to identify the horizontal subbundle of $T(TM)$ with $TM$).


With all this understood, it's difficult to understand what is even meant by "the integral of position" in a coordinate-invariant sense. Loosely, integration is a process of summing, but positions—points of a manifold—can't be added in any obvious natural way. (In order to subtract points in a coordinate-invariant manner, we had to construct an entirely new space, the tangent bundle $TM$.)

Further, one would naively expect that "the derivative of 'the integral of position with respect to time' is position (up to an additive constant)". If "the integral of position" could be interpreted as a path in some manifold $P$, the derivative of this path would then "live" both in $TP$ and in $M$; that's impossible, since "most" manifolds $M$ are not the total space of the tangent bundle of another manifold.

While these observations aren't definitive (I may be getting unimaginative with age), they do strongly suggest that

  • Within the framework of differential geometry, "the integral of position with respect to time" has no mathematical (much less physical) meaning.

  • Any useful definition of "the integral of position with respect to time" will require a fundamental reformulation of the notion of position.

  • Aside from interpretations within Euclidean geometry (which, as a matter of opinion, I suspect are "not particularly interesting"), the expression $$ \int \Vec{x}(t)\, dt = \left(\int x_{1}(t)\, dt, \int x_{2}(t)\, dt, \dots, \int x_{3}(t)\, dt\right) $$ is not meaningful. (Contrast with "the integral of position with respect to position", from which one can extract, e.g., the theory and applications of line integrals.)

  • Hmm, what do you think of the other answer? – 10 Replies Jan 08 '17 at 14:23
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    Ultimately, the choice of "best" answer is yours. For context, Wikipedia's "absement" page falls entirely under the final bullet point of my answer (integrals in Euclidean geometry). Despite the paper of Jantzen et al., I stand behind my initial assessments: Wikipedia's examples look physically unnatural to me (a lever controlling flow rate associates the lever's "absement" with total flux). The terminology list is difficult to assess. Naming a concept does not make the concept useful; instead, useful concepts earn special names. – Andrew D. Hwang Jan 08 '17 at 15:35
  • Absement is used as a mechanical analogy when talking about memory based electrical systems (memristors, memcapacitors, meminductors). See here: https://arxiv.org/abs/1201.1032 – kbau Jan 10 '17 at 17:23
  • I guess the community hath choosen your answer! – 10 Replies Jan 11 '17 at 19:23
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    @kbau: The term absement has certainly been used by serious academic authors in control theory, but the analogy aspect tends to confirm my assessment that absement is less a fundamental physical quantity than velocity. Again, the main thrust of my answer is that quantities such as absement do not make sense outside Gallilean spacetime (Euclidean spatial geometry, universal time), while velocity does. It's possible our current conception of velocity is wrong enough to overturn this answer, but that prospect will entail a general relativity-sized shift in our descriptions of space and time. – Andrew D. Hwang Jan 12 '17 at 13:52
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    I would also like to note that Euclidean space is an affine space/$\mathbb R^n$-torsor, which means that you have to impose an origin first before you can make sense of position being a vector which you seem to use here $\vec{x}(t) = \bigl(x_{1}(t), x_{2}(t), \dots, x_{n}(t)\bigr)$. If we don't fix an origin, the integral of position wouldn't have meaning either way. – Max0815 Sep 03 '23 at 08:05
  • The observation "this is meaningful only in Euclidean space" is interesting and helpful in answering the question, but then the opinion "therefore the whole concept isn't very meaningful or interesting" (if I'm paraphrasing correctly) seems like an odd thing to add. Many people, including myself, do find Euclidean space to be meaningful and interesting. The immediately-obvious useful application of this integral (in Euclidean space, of course), to me, is the one pointed out by @HagenvonEitzen 's comment on the question-- that is, to compute a particle's average position over a time interval. – Don Hatch Sep 22 '24 at 00:14
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It's called Absement. From the Wikipedia page,

... absement (or absition) is a measure of sustained displacement of an object from its initial position, i.e. a measure of how far away and for how long.

There are also names for more derivatives/integrals of position:

-4 Abserk
-3 Abseleration
-2 Absity
-1 Absement [Absition]
 0 Displacement [Position]
 1 Velocity
 2 Acceleration
 3 Jerk
 4 Jounce
 etc
Mike Pierce
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Ben Wilde
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Suppose there's a lever that you can move from $0$ to $1$. Letting $f(t)$ be the position of that lever over time as you move it, you can think of the lever's velocity $f'$, acceleration $f''$, etc. Now imagine that lever controls a floodgate. The floodgate is closed at the $0$ position and opens as you move the lever towards $1$. The integral $\int_0^t f(x)\,\mathrm{d}x$ measures the accumulation of water that has spilled from the floodgate over time. If you leave the lever at some fixed position, the water will be flowing out at a constant rate. The absement in this situation measures the accumulated water, equal to $\int_0^t f(x)\,\mathrm{d}x$, and is a measure of the sustained position of the lever.

Mike Pierce
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I would say that integral is the sum ($\int$)of the position ($x$) weighted by the duration ($dt$) stayed.

Ken T
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