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Is this line integral computation correct? (Green's Thm application) |
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| Aug20-12, 12:20 AM | #1 |
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Is this line integral computation correct? (Green's Thm application)
1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data
Find the value of the line integral [itex]\int[/itex] C(e-x^3 - 3y)dx + (tan y + y4 + x) dy where C is the counterclockwise-oriented circle of radius 4 centered at (0,2). 3. The attempt at a solution First off, I didn't think this was path independent since the derivative of the dx term in respect to y equals -3 which doesn't equal the derivative of the dy term with respect to x, 1. After getting stuck on some direct approaches, I realized it is probably a Green's Thm application. This then translates to [itex]\int[/itex][itex]\int[/itex] 4 dA. So in polar coordinates the path of the circle is x = 4 cos [itex]\vartheta[/itex] y = 4 sin [itex]\vartheta[/itex] + 2 This is where I get unsure. To try and get the limits on r I tried to say r = sqrt (x + y) and then plugged in the paramatized equations for x and y. This simplified to r = sqrt (20 + 16 sin [itex]\vartheta[/itex]). So then I thought that r varies from 2 to this general thing and hence [itex]\int[/itex] [itex]^{2pi}_{0}[/itex] [itex]\int[/itex][itex]^{\sqrt{20 + 16 sin\vartheta}_{2}}[/itex] 4 r dr d[itex]\vartheta[/itex]. Is this right? Note that the limits with respect to r is suppose to be 2 to that sqrt expression, the two just kept popping up a little below and to the right... In particular is this a correct way to find the respective limits of integration? Thanks! 1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data 2. Relevant equations 3. The attempt at a solution |
| Aug20-12, 02:31 AM | #2 |
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Did you mean: $$\int_C (e^{-x^3}-3y)dx+(\tan y + y^4+x)dy$$ |
| Aug20-12, 03:03 AM | #3 |
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1. The radius of the circle is given directly in the problem statement.
2. The double integral of a constant is equal to the constant multiplied by the area of the domain of integration, which is a circle of a known radius here. |
| Aug20-12, 09:04 AM | #4 |
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Is this line integral computation correct? (Green's Thm application)
Oops, sorry that was suppose to be a + rather than =. Thanks Voko, I should have seen that. That clears it all up for me.
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