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Calculus in some contexts means stone (such as a urinary calculus or salivary calculus), or can mean mineral deposits on teeth.A calculus, in medicine, is a stone that grows in some organs - such as a kidney.
No. Calculus is a branch of mathematics. Or a concretion of minerals - often in the kidney.
If you mean "who invented calculus", then Isaac Newton and Gottfried Leibniz both developed it independently.
Do a line integral.
In basic terms, Calculus is Differentiation and Integration And all things associated with that.
you mean like calculus?
A line is normal to another line when it is perpendicular.
Basic calculus is about the study of functions. The two main divisions of calculus are differentiation and integration. Differentiation has to do with finding the tangent line to a function at any given point on the function. Integration has to do with finding the area under (or above) a curve. Other topics covered in calculus include: Differential equations Approximations of functions (linear approximation, series, Taylor series) Function analysis (Intermediate Value Theorem, Mean Value Theorem)
No. Don't you mean cumulus?
It means that it is missing an electron. Why is this in calculus??
I don't think such a term is used in calculus. Check the spelling. Perhaps you mean point of inflection?
I don't think this is a calculus question.