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We motivate our third definition of an integral over a curve by returning to physics.This definition is very much a real variable one, so that we think of the plane as instead of A connection between this real variable definition and the complex variable definition of a contour integral will emerge later.
By a vector field on an open subset of we mean nothing more than a continuous function from into The functions and are called the components of the vector field
We will also speak of smooth vector fields, by which we will mean vector fields both of whose component functions and have continuous partial derivatives
on
The idea from physics is to think of a vector field as a force field, i.e., something thatexerts a force at the point with magnitude and acting in the direction of the vector For a particle to move within a force field, “work” must be done, that is energy must be provided to move the particle against the force,or energy is given to the particle as it moves under the influence of the force field. In either case, the basicdefinition of work is the product of force and distance traveled. More precisely, if a particle is moving in a direction within a force field, then the work done on the particle is the product of the component of the force field in the direction of and the distance traveled by the particle in that direction. That is, we must compute dot products of the vectors and Therefore, if a particle is moving along a curve parameterized with respect to arc length by and we write then the work done on the particle as it moves from to within the force field should intuitively be given by the formula
where the last expression is explicitly defining the shorthand notation we will be using.
The preceding discussion leads us to a new notion of what kind of object should be “integrated” over a curve.
A differential form on a subset of is denoted by and is determined by two continuous real-valued functions and on We say that is bounded or uniformly continuous if the functions and are bounded or uniformly continuous functions on We say that the differential form is smooth of order if the set is open, and the functions and have continuous mixed partial derivatives of order
If is a differential form on a set and if is any piecewise smooth curve of finite length contained in then we define the line integral of over by
where is a parameterization of by arc length.
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