integration along a curve: kicking it up a notch presented by: keith ouellette university of...

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Integration Along a Curve: Kicking it up a notch Presented by: Keith Ouellette University Of California, Los Angeles June 1, 2000

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Page 1: Integration Along a Curve: Kicking it up a notch Presented by: Keith Ouellette University Of California, Los Angeles June 1, 2000

Integration Along a Curve:

Kicking it up a notch

Presented by: Keith Ouellette University Of California, Los Angeles June 1, 2000

Page 2: Integration Along a Curve: Kicking it up a notch Presented by: Keith Ouellette University Of California, Los Angeles June 1, 2000

Motivation: Why do we want to integrate a function along a curve?

Page 3: Integration Along a Curve: Kicking it up a notch Presented by: Keith Ouellette University Of California, Los Angeles June 1, 2000

A Real Mathematician’s Answer:

Because we can. That’s why!

Page 4: Integration Along a Curve: Kicking it up a notch Presented by: Keith Ouellette University Of California, Los Angeles June 1, 2000

No, but really...

Motivation: A Massachusetts Dilemma

In Boston, we freeze during the wintah.

School is often cancelled due to the hazids of snow and ice.

During a snowball fight, we notice the ice coating the telephone wiahs

My buddy Maak the physics major says, “I bet you 10 bucks you can’t figure out the total mass of the ice on that wiah!”

Page 5: Integration Along a Curve: Kicking it up a notch Presented by: Keith Ouellette University Of California, Los Angeles June 1, 2000

You’re on.

But first I need to develop the theory of line integrals.

Page 6: Integration Along a Curve: Kicking it up a notch Presented by: Keith Ouellette University Of California, Los Angeles June 1, 2000

The thickness of the ice varies as one moves along the wire

The confused person

(an annoying recurring character)

Setting up the Problem…...

r = radius of wire

r

R = radius of wire + ice coating

R

Page 7: Integration Along a Curve: Kicking it up a notch Presented by: Keith Ouellette University Of California, Los Angeles June 1, 2000

Recall the Ole Physics formula:

Mass = density * volume

Density of ice = 0.92 g/cm3

Area of a cross section of ice = R- r2) cm2

Linear density f of ice on wire = 0.92 * R- r2) g/cm

So...

The total mass of ice on wire = total accumulation of the linear density function along the wire

Page 8: Integration Along a Curve: Kicking it up a notch Presented by: Keith Ouellette University Of California, Los Angeles June 1, 2000

Parameterize the wire using a continuously differentiable (i.e. smooth) function

2],[: Rba ))(),(()( tytxt

x(t)

y(t)

Real-valued, continuously differentiable functions

Page 9: Integration Along a Curve: Kicking it up a notch Presented by: Keith Ouellette University Of California, Los Angeles June 1, 2000

Now we can at least approximate the total mass of the ice along the wire by these 4 easy steps:

1. Partition2. Sample

3. Scale

4. Sum

Page 10: Integration Along a Curve: Kicking it up a notch Presented by: Keith Ouellette University Of California, Los Angeles June 1, 2000

1. Partition

Partition the arc into n subarcs

How? By partitioning [a,b] into n subintervals, we induce a partition of into n subarcs

x

y

t

tx(t),y(t))

… …

… t1

t1

t1

ti

ti

ti

a = t0

a = t0

t0

1

tn = b

tn = b

tnn

ti-1

ti-1

ti-1

i

Page 11: Integration Along a Curve: Kicking it up a notch Presented by: Keith Ouellette University Of California, Los Angeles June 1, 2000

2. SampleRecall f is the density function defined on [a,b]), our “frozen wire”.

On each subarc i, choose a point ixi*,yi*) and sample f at those points.

x

y

t

a = t0

tx(t),y(t))

a = t0 tn = b

tn = b

ti-1

ti-1

ti

ti

t1

t1

… …

t0

t1

tn

ti-1

ti

n

i

0x0*,y0

*)

i-1xi-1*,yi-

1*)

nxn*,yn*)

Page 12: Integration Along a Curve: Kicking it up a notch Presented by: Keith Ouellette University Of California, Los Angeles June 1, 2000

3. Scale

x

y

t

tx(t),y(t))

a = t0 tn = b ti-1 ti t1 … …

t0

t1

tn

ti-1 ti

0

n-1

i-

1

Now we scale those sampled values f(ifxi*,yi*) by the length of the subarc denoted by si

si

Page 13: Integration Along a Curve: Kicking it up a notch Presented by: Keith Ouellette University Of California, Los Angeles June 1, 2000

4. SumNow we sum those scaled sampled values to get what looks like a Riemann sum.

i

n

iii syxf

)**,(1

But we want a way to actually calculate this mutha.

So we need to bring it down to the case we know: the one variable case.

Page 14: Integration Along a Curve: Kicking it up a notch Presented by: Keith Ouellette University Of California, Los Angeles June 1, 2000

It seems so pointless.

Should I just give him the money right now?

Page 15: Integration Along a Curve: Kicking it up a notch Presented by: Keith Ouellette University Of California, Los Angeles June 1, 2000

No Way!!!!!

We gotta show him up!

Math majors, represent!

Let’s do this.

(The Encouragement Slide)

Page 16: Integration Along a Curve: Kicking it up a notch Presented by: Keith Ouellette University Of California, Los Angeles June 1, 2000

How, do you ask? By relating everything to t.

fxi*,yi*) = fti*)) for some ti*in [ti-1, ti ]

)()( 1 iii tts

almostsi

yi

xi

Notice that for si small, a continuous curve looks locally linear

(t i-1)

(t i)

Page 17: Integration Along a Curve: Kicking it up a notch Presented by: Keith Ouellette University Of California, Los Angeles June 1, 2000

ttttttt )(')(')()(

Since is continuously differentiable,

So when t is small,

t

tttt

t

)()()(' lim

0

Since fis path integrable (continuity on [a,b]) is sufficient for this), we may sample f((t)) and partition however we choose:

Let ti = (b-a)/n = t

Let ti* = ti-1

Page 18: Integration Along a Curve: Kicking it up a notch Presented by: Keith Ouellette University Of California, Los Angeles June 1, 2000

So we have

tttfsyxf i

n

iii

n

iii

*)(')*)(()**,(11

which is a Riemann sum of the one variable real-valued function f((t))|| ’(t)) ||

So letting L(P, f) and U(P, f) be our respective lower and upper Riemann sums...

Page 19: Integration Along a Curve: Kicking it up a notch Presented by: Keith Ouellette University Of California, Los Angeles June 1, 2000

b

a

dtttffds )('))((

)')(,(inf)')(,(sup)('))(( fPUfPLdtttfPP

b

a

where

Thus we define the path integral of f along the curve

Note: If f (x,y)=1 on [a,b]

dttdsb

a )('

= length of the curve

Page 20: Integration Along a Curve: Kicking it up a notch Presented by: Keith Ouellette University Of California, Los Angeles June 1, 2000

So to answer Maak’s challenge…

b

a

b

a

dttdtttds )2,1())tf((t,)('))(f( R)f(r, 2

the total mass of the ice is ………....

r = Radius of wiah = 10cm

R = Radius of wiah + ice

b

a

dttt )41()(t * 0.92 224

(t) = (t,t2) parametrization of wire (parabola)

f(r,R) = linear density = 0.92*(R2-r2)

Page 21: Integration Along a Curve: Kicking it up a notch Presented by: Keith Ouellette University Of California, Los Angeles June 1, 2000

NOW SHOW ME THE MONEY!!!!

Page 22: Integration Along a Curve: Kicking it up a notch Presented by: Keith Ouellette University Of California, Los Angeles June 1, 2000

Always Get A Prenuptual-Dr. Jock Rader

Words of Wisdom