Surface integral of vector field

sandylam966
Messages
12
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement


find ∫E.dS, where E = (Ar^2, Br (sinθ),C cosρ), over the outside conical surface S, given by 1≤r≤2, θ=\pi/3 (this is an open surface, excluding the end faces).

Homework Equations


The Attempt at a Solution



from the context I believe ρ is the plane polar angle on the x-y plane, so the surface is a slanted ring with width 1 around the z axis.
expressing S in vector v = ((√3 r cosρ)/2, (√3 r sinρ)/2, r/2), so ∫E.dS = ∫^{2pi}_{0}∫^{2}_{1} (Ar^2, (√3 Br)/2 ,C cosρ).((-√3 r cosρ)/4, (-√3 r sinρ)/4, 3r/4) drdρ, where I have taken the normal to the surface from outside to inside of the conical. Then, after the dot product each term in the integrand has a sine or cosine term, hence integrating ρ from 0 to 2pi will give zero.

the given answer is (7B pi)/2. where did I go wrong?
 
Last edited:
Physics news on Phys.org
From the problem statement I would rather say (r, ##\theta##, ##\rho##) are spherical coordinates.
 
bloby said:
From the problem statement I would rather say (r, ##\theta##, ##\rho##) are spherical coordinates.

yes that's what I've used. using let θ=pi/3 I parameterise the surface in terms of ρ and r. did I make any mistake here?
 
The domain is right: 1<r<2 and 0<##\rho##<2 pi, but the vectors are expressed in the basis ##\{e_{r},e_{\theta},e_{\rho}\}##.
The unit normal outside the surface is then very simple.
Can you find dS in this basis?
 
Last edited:
bloby said:
Yes, the vectors are expressed in the basis ##\{e_{r},e_{\theta},e_{\rho}\}##.
The normal outside the surface is then very simple.

hmm I don't think I get it. partial differentiating v wrt r and ρ, then take the cross product of the 2, I got ((-√3 r cosρ)/4, (-√3 r sinρ)/4, 3r/4) , pointing into the ring. is this not the correct normal?
 
Ok, yes it is possible but way too complicate here. (E is expressed in the basis I mentioned above. You are expressing things in ##\{e_x,e_y,e_z\}## here so to take the dot product you would have to express E in ##\{e_x,e_y,e_z\}##)
Keep things in shperical coordinates, it is much simpler here.
Remember
##e_{r}##: unite vector in the direction of growing r
##e_{\theta}##: unite vector in the direction of growing ##\theta##
##e_{\rho}##: unite vector in the direction of growing ##\rho##
 
There are two things I don't understand about this problem. First, when finding the nth root of a number, there should in theory be n solutions. However, the formula produces n+1 roots. Here is how. The first root is simply ##\left(r\right)^{\left(\frac{1}{n}\right)}##. Then you multiply this first root by n additional expressions given by the formula, as you go through k=0,1,...n-1. So you end up with n+1 roots, which cannot be correct. Let me illustrate what I mean. For this...

Similar threads

Back
Top