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PATH INDEPENDENCE? 13-19 from Check, and if independent, integrate from (0, 0, 0) to (a, b, c) 13. 2e (x cos 2y dx - sin 2y dy)

User Kay Am See
by
6.5k points

1 Answer

4 votes

The integral is path-independent if there is a scalar function
f whose gradient is


\\abla f=(2e^x\cos2y,-\sin2y)

(at least, that's what it looks like the given integrand is)

Then


(\partial f)/(\partial x)=2e^x\cos 2y\implies f(x,y)=2e^x\cos2y+g(y)

Differentiating both sides with respect to
y gives


(\partial f)/(\partial y)=-4e^x\sin 2y\\eq-\sin2y

so the line integral *is* dependent on the path. (again, assuming what I've written above actually reflects what the question is asking)

User Fschuindt
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7.2k points
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