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E l + E d + E r + E u F · d r = E curl F · N d S = E curl F · d S .

To approximate the flux over the entire surface, we add the values of the flux on the small squares approximating small pieces of the surface ( [link] ). By Green’s theorem, the flux across each approximating square is a line integral over its boundary. Let F be an approximating square with an orientation inherited from S and with a right side E l (so F is to the left of E ). Let F r denote the right side of F ; then, E l = F r . In other words, the right side of F is the same curve as the left side of E , just oriented in the opposite direction. Therefore,

E l F · d r = F r F · d r .

As we add up all the fluxes over all the squares approximating surface S , line integrals E l F · d r and F r F · d r cancel each other out. The same goes for the line integrals over the other three sides of E . These three line integrals cancel out with the line integral of the lower side of the square above E , the line integral over the left side of the square to the right of E , and the line integral over the upper side of the square below E ( [link] ). After all this cancelation occurs over all the approximating squares, the only line integrals that survive are the line integrals over sides approximating the boundary of S . Therefore, the sum of all the fluxes (which, by Green’s theorem, is the sum of all the line integrals around the boundaries of approximating squares) can be approximated by a line integral over the boundary of S . In the limit, as the areas of the approximating squares go to zero, this approximation gets arbitrarily close to the flux.

A diagram of a surface S sectioned into small pieces in a grid – they are small enough to be approximated by a square E. The orientation of each square is the same as S, shown with counterclockwise arrows in each square.. The N and F vectors are drawn coming off of one square.
Chop the surface into small pieces. The pieces should be small enough that they can be approximated by a square.
Two diagrams labeled A and B. A contains two squares, F and E. Both have arrows along the sides in a counterclockwise manner. The right side of F is labeled F_r. The left, right, upper, and lower sides of E are labeled E_l, E_r, E_u, and E_d, respectively. B contains five squares. F and E are drawn as they are in diagram A. Above, to the right, and below E there are three other squares: G, H, and I, respectively. All have arrows along their sides in a counterclockwise manner. The bottom side of G is labeled G_d, the left side of H is labeled H_l, and the upper side of I is labeled I_u.
(a) The line integral along E l cancels out the line integral along F r because E l = F r . (b) The line integral along any of the sides of E cancels out with the line integral along a side of an adjacent approximating square.

Let’s now look at a rigorous proof of the theorem in the special case that S is the graph of function z = f ( x , y ) , where x and y vary over a bounded, simply connected region D of finite area ( [link] ). Furthermore, assume that f has continuous second-order partial derivatives. Let C denote the boundary of S and let C ′ denote the boundary of D . Then, D is the “shadow” of S in the plane and C ′ is the “shadow” of C . Suppose that S is oriented upward. The counterclockwise orientation of C is positive, as is the counterclockwise orientation of C . Let F ( x , y , z ) = P , Q , R be a vector field with component functions that have continuous partial derivatives.

A diagram of a surface S in three dimensions, where z is a function of x and y notated as z=f(x,y). The normal N is drawn pointing up and away from the surface. D is the shadow, or projection of S in the (x,y)-plane. The curve around S is labeled C, and C’ is the projection of C in the (x,y)-plane. Arrows are drawn on C, the boundary of S, in a counterclockwise manner.
D is the “shadow,” or projection, of S in the plane and C is the projection of C .

We take the standard parameterization of S : x = x , y = y , z = g ( x , y ) . The tangent vectors are t x = 1 , 0 , g x and t y = 0 , 1 , g y , and therefore, t x · t y = g x , g y , 1 . By [link] ,

S curl F · d S = D [ ( R y Q z ) z x ( P z R x ) z y + ( Q x P y ) ] d A ,

where the partial derivatives are all evaluated at ( x , y , g ( x , y ) ) , making the integrand depend on x and y only. Suppose x ( t ) , y ( t ) , a t b is a parameterization of C . Then, a parameterization of C is x ( t ) , y ( t ) , g ( x ( t ) , y ( t ) ) , a t b . Armed with these parameterizations, the Chain rule, and Green’s theorem, and keeping in mind that P , Q , and R are all functions of x and y , we can evaluate line integral C F · d r :

Practice Key Terms 2

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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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