Hand in the underlined problems; the others are for practice.
Lecture 19. Thurs. (March 18): Changing variables in a double integral. Read SN sect CV, supplementing with Examples 1-4 in EP sect 14.9.
Problems: EP page 955 no. 9, page 956 no. 13, SN sect. Vect Calc, page 2.7 1, Special Problem: The original problem was to evaluate
Solutions:
EP page 955, no. 9: For
the Jacobian is
EP page 956, no. 13: Since
and
the
Jacobian is
Special Problem: Make the change of variables
The
Jacobian is
Lecture 20. Fri. (March 19): Vector fields. Line integrals in the plane.
Read SN sect. on Vect. Calc. section 1 (covered also in EP 15.1, pp. 960-1). Probs. SN Vect. Calc. Exercises 1.1, nos. 3i, ii, iii, 4 (solns p. 1.5). Read EP 15.2 pp. 969-74. Probs. EP page 976, 6, 9, 33a, b, 34, 35, 36 (S.26).
Lecture 21. Tues. (March 29): Path independence;
conservative fields in the plane. Read 15.3 to p. 979.
Problem: Work SN Vect. Calc. page 2.7 1, 2, 3 (S.27)
However, the solution to Problem 3 on page S.27 is incorrect. Rather,
The rest is correct.
Remark: The Fundamental Theorem of Calculus for line integrals is
Theorem 1. You should be able to state and prove the theorem (in the
plane; ignore ). The book writes
, in the
lectures and notes we use
. Both have the same
meaning: the line integral which calculates the work done by the
field
carrying a unit test object along the curve
.
Directions: Try each problem alone for 15 minutes. If you subsequently collaborate, this should be acknowledged and solutions must be written up independently.
Problem 1. (Thurs. 5 pt) Work EP page 958 (Misc. Problems) no. 52.
Solution: The integral is
Problem 2. (Fri. 2 pt)
Write down the velocity field for a standard -dimensional flow
between the lines
and
: The flow is upwards, with
parabolic cross-section; i.e., along any horizontal line segment
between 0 and
, the velocity vector has magnitude 0 at the
two ends, while in between its length increases and decreases so
the tips of the vectors lie on a parabola, whose maximum height
is
, in the middle. Indicate reasoning. (This is the way a
liquid flows in a pipe if it adheres to the pipe walls.)
Solution: The direction of the vector field is always
Its
magnitude must be
since it has to be quadratic and
vanish at
and
and have size
when
Thus
Problem 3. (Fri. 3 pt)
Imagine the -axis represents an infinitely long, uniformly
charged wire. The electric force it exerts on a unit charge at
the point
is given by
Solution:
The vector field is
Problem 4. (Fri. 8 pt)
Answer the same questions as in SN Vect. Calc. page 2.7 no. 1 for the function
, and the path
given by the quarter circle
running from
to
.
Solution: