Answer to Question #204890 in Physics for DEBANKUR BISWAS

Question #204890

Using Green's theorem evaluate the integral: ∫C (y³dx + 3x³dy) where C is the contour along the circle x² + y² = 1 taken counter clockwise.


1
Expert's answer
2021-06-09T17:54:20-0400

According to Green's theorem, "\\int_C P dx + Q dy = \\iint_D \\left(\\frac{ \\partial Q}{\\partial x} - \\frac{\\partial P}{\\partial y}\\right) dA".

For given vector field, "\\frac{ \\partial Q}{\\partial x} - \\frac{\\partial P}{\\partial y} = 6 x - 3 y^2", hence we need to evaluate surface integral"\\iint (6 x - 3 y^2) dx dy" over the circle of radius 1, centered at the origin.

It is convenient to do it in polar coordinates, where surface element is "dS = r dr d\\varphi", and "0\\leq r \\leq 1", "0\\leq \\varphi \\leq 2 \\pi":

"\\int_0^{2\\pi} d\\varphi \\int_0^1 r (6 r \\cos \\varphi - 3 r^2 \\sin^2 \\varphi) = \\int_0^{2\\pi}(\\frac{6}{3}\\cos \\varphi - \\frac{3}{4} \\sin^2 \\varphi)d \\varphi ="

"\\left[ 2 \\sin \\varphi - \\frac{3}{4}(\\frac{\\varphi}{2} - \\frac{1}{4} \\sin 2 \\varphi)\\right]_0^{2 \\pi} = -\\frac{3}{4}\\pi".


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