Calculus: Early Transcendentals 9th Edition

Published by Cengage Learning
ISBN 10: 1337613924
ISBN 13: 978-1-33761-392-7

Chapter 16 - Section 16.3 - The Fundamental Theorem for Line Integrals - 16.3 Exercise - Page 1153: 29

Answer

$\dfrac{31}{4}$

Work Step by Step

When $F(x,y)=pi+qj$ is a conservative field, then throughout the domain $D$, we get $\dfrac{\partial p}{\partial y}=\dfrac{\partial q}{\partial x}$ $p$ and $q$ are the first-order partial derivatives on the domain $D$. Here, we have $f_x(x,y)=x^3$ and $f_y(x,y)=y^3$ $f(x,y)=\dfrac{x^3}{4}+g(y)$ [g(y) : A function of y] $f_y(x,y)=y^3+g'(y)$ Here, $g(y)=k$ Thus, $f(x,y)=\dfrac{x^4}{4}+\dfrac{y^4}{4}+k$ Now, $W=\int_C F \cdot dr =f(2,2)-f(1,0)=\dfrac{32}{4}-\dfrac{1}{4}=\dfrac{31}{4}$
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