Essential Concepts
- Green’s theorem relates the integral over a connected region to an integral over the boundary of the region. Green’s theorem is a version of the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus in one higher dimension.
- Green’s Theorem comes in two forms: a circulation form and a flux form. In the circulation form, the integrand is F⋅TF⋅T. In the flux form, the integrand is F⋅N.
- Green’s theorem can be used to transform a difficult line integral into an easier double integral, or to transform a difficult double integral into an easier line integral.
- A vector field is source free if it has a stream function. The flux of a source-free vector field across a closed curve is zero, just as the circulation of a conservative vector field across a closed curve is zero.
Key Equations
- Green’s theorem, circulation form
∮CPdx+Qdy=∬DQx−PydA, where C is the boundary of D - Green’s theorem, flux form
∮CF⋅dr=∬DQx−PydA, where C is the boundary of D - Green’s theorem, extended version
∮∂DF⋅dr=∬DQx−PydA
Glossary
- Green’s theorem
- relates the integral over a connected region to an integral over the boundary of the region
- stream function
- if F=⟨P,Q⟩ is a source-free vector field, then stream function g is a function such that P=gy, and Q=−gx
Candela Citations
CC licensed content, Shared previously
- Calculus Volume 3. Authored by: Gilbert Strang, Edwin (Jed) Herman. Provided by: OpenStax. Located at: https://openstax.org/books/calculus-volume-3/pages/1-introduction. License: CC BY-NC-SA: Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike. License Terms: Access for free at https://openstax.org/books/calculus-volume-3/pages/1-introduction