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Evaluating a Line
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Calculus (MindTap Course List)
- Evaluating line integrals Use the given potential function φ of the gradient field F and the curve C to evaluate the line integral ∫C F ⋅ dr in two ways.a. Use a parametric description of C and evaluate the integral directly.b. Use the Fundamental Theorem for line integrals. φ(x, y, z) = xy + xz + yz; C: r(t) = ⟨t, 2t, 3t⟩ , for 0 ≤ t ≤ 4arrow_forwardEvaluating line integrals Use the given potential function φ of the gradient field F and the curve C to evaluate the line integral ∫C F ⋅ dr in two ways.a. Use a parametric description of C and evaluate the integral directly.b. Use the Fundamental Theorem for line integrals. φ(x, y) = x + 3y; C: r(t) = ⟨2 - t, t⟩ , for 0 ≤ t ≤ 2arrow_forwardA. State the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus for Line Integrals. B. Let f(x, y, z) = x^2 + 2y^2 + 3z^2 and F = grad f. Find the line integral of F along the line C with parametric equations x = 1 + t, y = 1 + 2t, z = 1 + 3t, 0 ≤ t ≤ 1. You must compute the line integral directly by using the given parametrization. C. Check your answer in Part B by using the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus for Line Integrals.arrow_forward
- Assorted line integrals Evaluate the line integral using the given curve C.arrow_forwardScalar line integrals Evaluate the following line integral along the curve C.arrow_forwardLine integrals Use Green’s Theorem to evaluate the following line integral. Assume all curves are oriented counterclockwise.A sketch is helpful. The flux line integral of F = ⟨ex - y, ey - x⟩, where C is theboundary of {(x, y): 0 ≤ y ≤ x, 0 ≤ x ≤ 1}arrow_forward
- Stokes’ Theorem for evaluating line integrals Evaluate theline integral ∮C F ⋅ dr by evaluating the surface integral in Stokes’Theorem with an appropriate choice of S. Assume C has a counterclockwiseorientation. F = ⟨y, xz, -y⟩; C is the ellipse x2 + y2/4 = 1 in the plane z = 1.arrow_forwardEvaluate the line integral ∫CF→⋅dr→ using the Fundamental Theorem of Line Integrals if F→(x,y)=(4x+4y)i→+(4x+4y)j→and Cis the smooth curve from (−1,1)to (5,6). Enter the exact answer. ∫CF→⋅dr→=arrow_forwardStokes’ Theorem for evaluating surface integrals Evaluate the line integral in Stokes’ Theorem to determine the value of the surface integral ∫∫S (∇ x F) ⋅ n dS. Assume n points in an upward direction. F = ⟨4x, -8z, 4y⟩; S is the part of the paraboloidz = 1 - 2x2 - 3y2 that lies within the paraboloid z = 2x2 + y2 .arrow_forward
- Using Stokes’ Theorem to evaluate a line integral Evaluate the lineintegral ∮C F ⋅ dr, where F = z i - z j + (x2 - y2) k and C consists of the three line segments that bound the plane z = 8 - 4x - 2y in the first octant, oriented as shown.arrow_forwardLine integrals of vector fields in the plane Given the followingvector fields and oriented curves C, evaluate ∫C F ⋅ T ds. F = ⟨-y, x⟩ on the parabola y = x2 from (0, 0) to (1, 1)arrow_forwardStokes’ Theorem for evaluating surface integrals Evaluate the line integral in Stokes’ Theorem to determine the value of the surface integral ∫∫S (∇ x F) ⋅ n dS. Assume n points in an upward direction. F = ⟨y, z - x, -y⟩; S is the part of the paraboloidz = 2 - x2 - 2y2 that lies within the cylinder x2 + y2 = 1.arrow_forward
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