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Let S be a smooth orientable surface with parameterization r ( u , v ) . For each point r ( a , b ) on the surface, vectors t u and t v lie in the tangent plane at that point. Vector t u × t v is normal to the tangent plane at r ( a , b ) and is therefore normal to S at that point. Therefore, the choice of unit normal vector

N = t u × t v t u × t v

gives an orientation of surface S .

Choosing an orientation

Give an orientation of cylinder x 2 + y 2 = r 2 , 0 z h .

This surface has parameterization

r ( u , v ) = r cos u , r sin u , v , 0 u < 2 π , 0 v h .

The tangent vectors are t u = r sin u , r cos u , 0 and t v = 0 , 0 , 1 . To get an orientation of the surface, we compute the unit normal vector

N = t u × t v t u × t v .

In this case, t u × t v = r cos u , r sin u , 0 and therefore

t u × t v = r 2 cos 2 u + r 2 sin 2 u = r .

An orientation of the cylinder is

N ( u , v ) = r cos u , r sin u , 0 r = cos u , sin u , 0 .

Notice that all vectors are parallel to the xy -plane, which should be the case with vectors that are normal to the cylinder. Furthermore, all the vectors point outward, and therefore this is an outward orientation of the cylinder ( [link] ).

A diagram of a vertical cylinder cut in half by a plane. An outward-pointing normal stretches out from the side of the cylinder.
If all the vectors normal to a cylinder point outward, then this is an outward orientation of the cylinder.
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Give the “upward” orientation of the graph of f ( x , y ) = x y .

N ( x , y ) = y 1 + x 2 + y 2 , x 1 + x 2 + y 2 , 1 1 + x 2 + y 2

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Since every curve has a “forward” and “backward” direction (or, in the case of a closed curve, a clockwise and counterclockwise direction), it is possible to give an orientation to any curve. Hence, it is possible to think of every curve as an oriented curve. This is not the case with surfaces, however. Some surfaces cannot be oriented; such surfaces are called nonorientable . Essentially, a surface can be oriented if the surface has an “inner” side and an “outer” side, or an “upward” side and a “downward” side. Some surfaces are twisted in such a fashion that there is no well-defined notion of an “inner” or “outer” side.

The classic example of a nonorientable surface is the Möbius strip. To create a Möbius strip, take a rectangular strip of paper, give the piece of paper a half-twist, and the glue the ends together ( [link] ). Because of the half-twist in the strip, the surface has no “outer” side or “inner” side. If you imagine placing a normal vector at a point on the strip and having the vector travel all the way around the band, then (because of the half-twist) the vector points in the opposite direction when it gets back to its original position. Therefore, the strip really only has one side.

An image showing the construction of a Mobius strip. The first step shows a rectangle with corners A, B, C, and D, labeled from bottom left to bottom right in a clockwise manner. In the second step, the rectangle is flipped along the middle; now, corner D is in the upper right position, and corner C is in the lower right position. We can see the “back” side of the rectangle. In the final step, the rectangle is looped. Corner B connects to corner D, and corner A connects to corner C. The flip from step two remains. But, the “front” and “back” are now the same because of the flip!
The construction of a Möbius strip.

Since some surfaces are nonorientable, it is not possible to define a vector surface integral on all piecewise smooth surfaces. This is in contrast to vector line integrals, which can be defined on any piecewise smooth curve.

Surface integral of a vector field

With the idea of orientable surfaces in place, we are now ready to define a surface integral of a vector field    . The definition is analogous to the definition of the flux of a vector field along a plane curve. Recall that if F is a two-dimensional vector field and C is a plane curve, then the definition of the flux of F along C involved chopping C into small pieces, choosing a point inside each piece, and calculating F · N at the point (where N is the unit normal vector at the point). The definition of a surface integral of a vector field proceeds in the same fashion, except now we chop surface S into small pieces, choose a point in the small (two-dimensional) piece, and calculate F · N at the point.

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Source:  OpenStax, Calculus volume 3. OpenStax CNX. Feb 05, 2016 Download for free at http://legacy.cnx.org/content/col11966/1.2
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