LINE, SURFACE AND VOLUME INTEGRALS
Each of the line integrals in (11.1) is evaluated over some curveCthat may be
either open (AandBbeing distinct points) or closed (the curveCforms a loop,
so thatAandBare coincident). In the case whereCis closed, the line integral
is written
∮
Cto indicate this. The curve may be given either parametrically by
r(u)=x(u)i+y(u)j+z(u)kor by means of simultaneous equations relatingx, y, z
for the given path (in Cartesian coordinates). A full discussion of the different
representations of space curves was given in section 10.3.
In general, the value of the line integral depends not only on the end-points
AandBbut also on the pathCjoining them. For a closed curve we must also
specify the direction around the loop in which the integral is taken. It is usually
taken to be such that a person walking around the loopCin this direction
always has the regionRon his/her left; this is equivalent to traversingCin the
anticlockwise direction (as viewed from above).
11.1.1 Evaluating line integrals
The method of evaluating a line integral is to reduce it to a set of scalar integrals.
It is usual to work in Cartesian coordinates, in which casedr=dxi+dyj+dzk.
The first type of line integral in (11.1) then becomes simply
∫
C
φdr=i
∫
C
φ(x, y, z)dx+j
∫
C
φ(x, y, z)dy+k
∫
C
φ(x, y, z)dz.
The three integrals on the RHS are ordinary scalar integrals that can be evaluated
in the usual way once the path of integrationChas been specified. Note that in
the above we have used relations of the form
∫
φidx=i
∫
φdx,
which is allowable since the Cartesian unit vectors are of constant magnitude
and direction and hence may be taken out of the integral. If we had been using
a different coordinate system, such as spherical polars, then, as we saw in the
previous chapter, the unit basis vectors would not be constant. In that case the
basis vectors could not be factorised out of the integral.
The second and third line integrals in (11.1) can also be reduced to a set of
scalar integrals by writing the vector fieldain terms of its Cartesian components
asa=axi+ayj+azk,whereax,ay,azare each (in general) functions ofx, y, z.
The second line integral in (11.1), for example, can then be written as
∫
C
a·dr=
∫
C
(axi+ayj+azk)·(dxi+dyj+dzk)
=
∫
C
(axdx+aydy+azdz)
=
∫
C
axdx+
∫
C
aydy+
∫
C
azdz. (11.2)