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Mathematical Expression Editor
We accumulate vectors along a path.
In this section we introduce a new type of integrals, line integrals also known as path
integrals. Let’s start with the definition of a line integral:
Let be a vector field, be a smooth vector valued function tracing a curve exactly
once as runs from to ,
A line integral is an integral of the form:
Since and , we may write
If the path is closed, then sometimes people write a “circle” on the intgeral sign:
This notation is not critical, but it can sometimes help us from making silly
mistakes.
Which of the following are line integrals?
Read on to learn the meaning of this new integral.
What do line integrals measure?
A line integral measures the flow of a vector field along a path. The basic idea is that
there is some vector field given by :
Now we add an oriented path that is parameterized by . This can be thought of as a
path that an object takes through the field. To reason via a specific example, we’ll
add a path below:
To figure out if the flow of the vector field is “with” the direction of the path, we
use the dot product:
When the direction of the field and the direction of
the path are in alignment, the dot product is…
positivezeronegative
When the direction of the field and the direction of the path are orthogonal, the dot
product is…
positivezeronegative
When the direction of the field and the direction of the path are in opposite
direction, the dot product is…
positivezeronegative
Integrating over the path sums these infinitesimal measurements: Thus the line
integral measures the flow of a field along a path. In particular, if the value of the
line integral is positive, then the flow is with the path; if the value is negative, then
the flow is against the path.
Consider the following vector field along with a (directed) curve .
Do you expect to be positive, zero, or negative?
positivezeronegative
We can think about this better if we break the path into pieces: , , .
We can see that the vectors are flowing with the direction of . Note that the the
magnitude of these vectors is large, so this contributes a large positive value to our
integral.
The field vectors are orthogonal to the direction of the path . So this part contributes
nothing to the integral.
The field vectors are flowing against the direction of . However, their magnitude is
much less than the vectors that flowed with . So this contributes a small negative
value to our integral.
Consider the following vector field along with a (directed) curve .
Do you expect to be positive, zero, or negative?
positivezeronegative
We can think about this better if we break the path into pieces: , , .
The field vectors are orthogonal to the direction of the path . So this part contributes
nothing to the integral.
The field vectors are flowing against the direction of . This contributes a negative
value to our integral.
The field vectors are again orthogonal to the direction of the path . So this part
contributes nothing to the integral.
Consider the following vector field along with a (directed) curve .
Do you expect to be positive, zero, or negative?
positivezeronegative
Think about what the tangent vectors to the parameterized curve look like, and
whether they point with the field or against the field.
Consider the following vector field along with a (directed) curve .
Do you expect to be positive, zero, or negative?
positivezeronegative
Think about what the tangent vectors to the parameterized curve look like, and
whether they point with the field or against the field.
Let’s attempt to solve a discrete problem.
Below we have a very simple directed curve (it’s a line) along with field vectors from
a vector field .
Setting , estimate:
If , we have that We know that and Since is a line
of slope , Since we want to estimate We will compute: Write with me
Computations with line integrals
Let and let be the unit circle centered at the origin. Compute
The path can be
parameterized by
with . To compute the integral, write with me
Any smooth path can be approximated with a polygonal path. These can be quite
easy to integrate. Check out our next example.
Let and let be the polygonal path below parameterized in a counterclockwise
direction:
Compute
We need to parameterize our paths in a counterclockwise direction.
We’ll break it into four line segments each parameterized as runs from to .
Where:
and each draws the line as runs from to . Write:
For each of the integrands above, say , we will write
and combine them into a single integral. Write with me
The fundamental theorems of calculus
We will soon see that there are many “Fundamental Theorems of calculus.”
What makes them similar is that they all share the following rather vague
description:
To compute a certain sort of integral over a region, we may do a
computation on the boundary of the region that involves one fewer
integrations.
Each version of the Fundamental Theorem of calculus makes the “vague” statement
above precise. For example, when working with a single variable, the Fundamental
Theorem concludes: In this case we are doing an integral over the “region” , and the
“computation” that allows “one fewer integrations” is antidifferentiation. This is the
only Fundamental Theorem you have known so far in your studies. However with
additional dimensions, there come additional derivatives. When working with
function we have the gradient as a “derivative.” This brings us to our first of several
new fundamental theorems.
Fundamental Theorem for Line Integrals If is a curve that starts at and ends at ,
then:
Like the first fundamental theorem we met in our very first calculus class, the
fundamental theorem for line integrals says that if we can find a potential function
for a gradient field, we can evaluate a line integral over this gradient field by
evaluating at the end-points. The up-shot is that whenever you are dealing with a
line integral, you should always start by checking to see if you are working with a
gradient field.
Let . Compute:
Now let: Compute where is shown below:
Conservative fields
When dealing with gradient fields and closed curve something very nice
happens.
Suppose that is a closed curve, one that starts and stops at the same location.
Compute:
This leads us to our definition:
A conservative field is just another name for a
gradient field.
If something is special enough to be named twice, we ought to do some more
examples.
Let . Let be the polygonal path below parameterized in a counterclockwise direction:
Compute
In light of the Fundamental Theorem for line integrals, we should check to
see if our field is a gradient field using the Clairaut gradient test: Since our field is a
gradient field, and our curve is closed, we see that
Below we see a directed curve with some field vectors attached.
Assuming that the field vectors are constant along each “side” of our polygonal path,
compute:
This problem would be easier if our field was a gradient field, and while it
surely isn’t, the field is constant along two paths that together make up all of :
So now we see that so we have that Using the Clairaut gradient test we see that isis not a gradient field when restricted to either part of . Let be a potential function for .
One candidate for the the potential function is By the Fundamental Theorem for
Line Integrals,
and
So