Oh man my Calc3 final is in 5 hours and i can't figure out this problem on the practice final.
It's kind of tough, but I keep getting stuck and I think I'm approaching it the wrong way. You will literally be saving my grade if you can help me with this, because chances are he's gonna put something like this on the final.
If anyone can do it, I would be much obliged:
Use Stoke's Theorem to find INT(Fdr) over curve C where C is the curve parametrized by <cost,sint,cost-sint>, 0<t<2pi. And F(x,y,z)=<5yz,x^2-y,yz>.
If anyone can do it, it would definately help a lot. First thing I did was change the parametrization of C to in terms of x,y, and z, but I think that is where I'm going wrong. Then I changed it to an integral over a surface S of curlF, and then to an integral over a region D, but I didn't know what to set the boundaries to, and the boundaries I got gave me zero for an answer.
<REWARD>
If someone can do it I'll send them 2 crisp dollar bills in the mail, oh yes.
</REWARD>
It's kind of tough, but I keep getting stuck and I think I'm approaching it the wrong way. You will literally be saving my grade if you can help me with this, because chances are he's gonna put something like this on the final.
If anyone can do it, I would be much obliged:
Use Stoke's Theorem to find INT(Fdr) over curve C where C is the curve parametrized by <cost,sint,cost-sint>, 0<t<2pi. And F(x,y,z)=<5yz,x^2-y,yz>.
If anyone can do it, it would definately help a lot. First thing I did was change the parametrization of C to in terms of x,y, and z, but I think that is where I'm going wrong. Then I changed it to an integral over a surface S of curlF, and then to an integral over a region D, but I didn't know what to set the boundaries to, and the boundaries I got gave me zero for an answer.
<REWARD>
If someone can do it I'll send them 2 crisp dollar bills in the mail, oh yes.
</REWARD>