Calculus: Early Transcendentals 8th Edition

Published by Cengage Learning
ISBN 10: 1285741552
ISBN 13: 978-1-28574-155-0

Chapter 16 - Section 16.9 - The Divergence Theorem - 16.9 Exercise - Page 1145: 6

Answer

$\dfrac{3a^2b^2c^2}{4}$

Work Step by Step

The Divergence Theorem states that $\iint_S \overrightarrow{F}\cdot d\overrightarrow{S}=\iiint_Ediv \overrightarrow{F}dV $ $div F=\dfrac{\partial a}{\partial x}+\dfrac{\partial b}{\partial y}+\dfrac{\partial c}{\partial z}$ This implies that $div F=\dfrac{\partial (x^2yz)}{\partial x}+\dfrac{\partial (xy^2z)}{\partial y}+\dfrac{\partial (xyz^2)}{\partial z}=6xyz$ $=\int_{0}^a\int_0^b \int_0^c (6xyz)dzdydx$ $=\int_{0}^a\int_0^b [6xy(z^2/2)]_0^cdydx$ $=\int_{0}^a\int_0^b [3xy \times (c^2) ]dydx$ $=\dfrac{3a^2b^2c^2}{4}$
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