Green's Theorem Homework - Solve for ∫c (3x2 -1).dr

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around applying Green's Theorem to evaluate a line integral involving a vector field. The original poster presents their work on the integral and seeks clarification on their approach and the subsequent steps for a related part of the problem.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Assumption checking, Problem interpretation

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the correctness of the original poster's integral setup and transformations. There are inquiries about the limits of integration and the interpretation of the region of integration, particularly regarding the relationship between x and y in the context of the given functions.

Discussion Status

Some participants affirm the original poster's calculations while others provide guidance on the limits of integration. There is an ongoing exploration of the appropriate coordinate system and the implications of the problem's geometric setup, with no explicit consensus reached on the final approach.

Contextual Notes

Participants note the potential confusion regarding the geometric interpretation of the region of integration, specifically whether to consider circular boundaries or parabolic ones. The discussion highlights the need to adhere to the given equations when determining limits.

gl0ck
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Homework Statement



Hello,

I know this might be trivial but,
can you please tell me what I am missing?
Here is my problem :
Screenshotfrom2014-05-07103331_zps24eda9da.png


Homework Equations


Given F = (yi+x3j).dr
Q = x3
P = y
=> ∂Q/∂x = 3x2 and ∂P/dy = 1
c (3x2 -1).dr = ∫2Pi010 (3r2cosθ2-1) rdrdθ
2Pi010 (3r3cosθ2-r) drdθ
Is it true so far ?

Thanks
 
Last edited:
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Hi,

What you've done is right. Go ahead with the problem.
 
Sunil Simha said:
Hi,

What you've done is right. Go ahead with the problem.

2Pi010 (3r3cosθ2-r) drdθ
->∫2Pi0(3/4cos2θ-1/2) dθ
->3/4∫2Pi0(cos2θ-1/2) dθ
->3/8[θ+sin(θ)cos(θ)-θ/2]2Pi0
->-Pi/4

Is this now correct?
If it is correct what about part b)
it looks to me like 1/4 circle when it is plotted but here I have y = x^2 and no radius to start the same thing again and I am not sure about the 1st integral neither, because I think it cannot be from 0 to Pi/2 because it doesn't start from x= 0 but from y = 0
 
Last edited:
gl0ck said:
2Pi010 (3r3cosθ2-r) drdθ
->∫2Pi0(3/4cos2θ-1/2) dθ
->3/4∫2Pi0(cos2θ-1/2) dθ
->3/8[θ+sin(θ)cos(θ)-θ/2]2Pi0
->-Pi/4

Is this now correct?

Yup the answer is right.

gl0ck said:
If it is correct what about part b)
it looks to me like 1/4 circle when it is plotted but here I have y = x^2 and no radius to start the same thing again and I am not sure about the 1st integral neither, because I think it cannot be from 0 to Pi/2 because it doesn't start from x= 0 but from y = 0

Stick to cartesian coordinates on this one. What are the limits on y (in terms of x) and x?
 
Sunil Simha said:
Yup the answer is right.



Stick to cartesian coordinates on this one. What are the limits on y (in terms of x) and x?

Can we take that r = 1 because the line from (0,1) to (1,1) is the radius if we take it as 1/4 of a circle and this is the bottom right part?
A bit confused by the limits though. I think x is from 0 to [itex]\sqrt{}y[/itex]
and y is from 0 to 1?
 
No, there is no "quarter circle". To integrate over the region, take x going from 0 to 1 and, for each x, y going from [itex]x^2[/itex] to x.

(You could do in the other order, taking y from 0 to 1 and, for each y, x from y to [itex]\sqrt{y}[/itex].)
 
HallsofIvy said:
No, there is no "quarter circle". To integrate over the region, take x going from 0 to 1 and, for each x, y going from [itex]x^2[/itex] to x.

(You could do in the other order, taking y from 0 to 1 and, for each y, x from y to [itex]\sqrt{y}[/itex].)

Isn't it supposed to be y from 0 to x2 and and x from 0 to 1 ?

Alternatively, x from √y to 1 and y from 0 to 1.
 
Sunil Simha said:
Isn't it supposed to be y from 0 to x2 and and x from 0 to 1 ?

Alternatively, x from √y to 1 and y from 0 to 1.

With these boundaries I found it to be 4/15 which is the answer indeed
Thanks very much !
Can I ask you one more thing, when if ever we can refer to a circle to solve these kind of questions, or I should look for x^2 + y^2 = r , in order to refer to a circle?
 
gl0ck said:
when if ever we can refer to a circle to solve these kind of questions, or I should look for x^2 + y^2 = r , in order to refer to a circle?

Yes that's right. Only if your boundary is a circle can you refer to a circle. You must use the equation of the boundary given. Here, for example, the boundaries were y=x2, y=0 and x=1.
 

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