View Full Version : how do i do this?
jlmac2001
Feb5-04, 09:42 PM
Find the work (intergral over C )F dot dr done by a force F=yi + xj in going all the wy counterclockwise around circle C give by x^2+y^2+2x=0, by the easiet technique you know.
Would i get a double intergral over C (-1) dxdy? How would I get C?
himanshu121
Feb6-04, 03:12 AM
U can interchange dy into dx and vice versa from the equation of circle and it will be easy to integrate
HallsofIvy
Feb6-04, 06:17 AM
The easiest way is this: Since d(y)/y= 1= d(x)/dx, this is a "conservative" force field (mathematically, ydx+ xdy is an "exact differential") and so its integral around any closed path is 0.
I'm not sure where you got "-1" from. Using Green's theorem the integrand would be d(x)/dx- d(y)/dy= 1- 1= 0 just as above.
Saying "How would I get C?" makes it sound as if you think C is a constant. You don't have to "get" C: C is the path given.
IF the problem were to integrate, say, ydx+ 3xdy, then we would integrate \int (\frac{d(3x)}{dx}-\frac{d(y)}{dy})dA
= 2\int dA which is just 2 times the area of the circle.
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