Vector calculus extends calculus to vector fields - functions that assign vectors to points in space.
Key concepts:
Scalar fields: Functions that assign scalars to points
Vector fields: Functions that assign vectors to points
Operations: Gradient, divergence, curl, line integrals, surface integrals
A scalar field is a function f:Rn→R that assigns a scalar value to each point.
Examples:
Temperature distribution: T(x,y,z)
Pressure field: P(x,y,z)
Electric potential: ϕ(x,y,z)
Notation: For 3D: f(x,y,z)
A vector field is a function F:Rn→Rn that assigns a vector to each point.
Examples:
Velocity field of fluid flow
Electric field E(x,y,z)
Magnetic field B(x,y,z)
Gravitational field g(x,y,z)
Notation: For 3D: F(x,y,z)=P(x,y,z)i^+Q(x,y,z)j^+R(x,y,z)k^
a) Definition
The del operator ∇ is a vector differential operator:
a) Definition
The gradient of a scalar field f(x,y,z) is:
b) Example
Find gradient of f(x,y,z)=x2+y2+z2
Solution:
a) Definition
The divergence of a vector field F=Pi^+Qj^+Rk^ is:
b) Example
Find divergence of F=x2i^+y2j^+z2k^
Solution:
a) Definition
The curl of a vector field F=Pi^+Qj^+Rk^ is:
b) Determinant Form
We can write curl as:
c) Example
Find curl of F=yi^−xj^
Solution:
Here P=y, Q=−x, R=0
Simplify:
a) Laplacian of a Scalar
b) Laplacian of a Vector
For F=Pi^+Qj^+Rk^:
Gradient of curl is zero: ∇×(∇f)=0
Divergence of curl is zero: ∇⋅(∇×F)=0
Divergence of gradient is Laplacian: ∇⋅(∇f)=∇2f
Curl of curl: ∇×(∇×F)=∇(∇⋅F)−∇2F
Gradient of product: ∇(fg)=f∇g+g∇f
Divergence of scalar times vector: ∇⋅(fF)=f(∇⋅F)+F⋅(∇f)
Curl of scalar times vector: ∇×(fF)=f(∇×F)+(∇f)×F
Divergence of cross product: ∇⋅(F×G)=G⋅(∇×F)−F⋅(∇×G)
a) Definition
For scalar field f along curve C:
where ds is arc length element.
b) Example
Evaluate ∫C(x2+y2)ds along circle x2+y2=4 from (2,0) to (0,2)
Solution:
Parameterize: x=2cost, y=2sint, 0≤t≤2π
a) Definition
For vector field F along curve C:
b) Component Form
If F=Pi^+Qj^+Rk^ and dr=dxi^+dyj^+dzk^:
c) Example
Evaluate ∫CF⋅dr where F=yi^−xj^ along straight line from (0,0) to (1,1)
Solution:
Parameterize: x=t, y=t, 0≤t≤1
A vector field F is conservative if there exists a scalar potential function ϕ such that:
For F=Pi^+Qj^+Rk^, the following are equivalent:
F is conservative (F=∇ϕ)
∫CF⋅dr is path-independent
∮CF⋅dr=0 for all closed curves C
∇×F=0 (curl is zero)
If F=∇ϕ, then:
Integrate to find ϕ.
Check if F=(2xy+z3)i^+x2j^+3xz2k^ is conservative and find potential.
Solution:
First find curl:
Compute:
i^ component: ∂y∂(3xz2)−∂z∂(x2)=0−0=0
j^ component: −[∂x∂(3xz2)−∂z∂(2xy+z3)]=−[3z2−3z2]=0
k^ component: ∂x∂(x2)−∂y∂(2xy+z3)=2x−2x=0
Since ∇×F=0, field is conservative.
Find potential ϕ:
From ∂x∂ϕ=2xy+z3:
From ∂y∂ϕ=x2:
So ϕ=x2y+xz3+g(z)
From ∂z∂ϕ=3xz2:
Thus ϕ=x2y+xz3+C
a) Definition
For scalar field f(x,y,z) over surface S:
where dS is surface area element.
b) Example
Evaluate ∬S(x2+y2)dS over sphere x2+y2+z2=a2
Solution:
Use spherical coordinates: x=asinθcosϕ, y=asinθsinϕ, z=acosθ
Surface element: dS=a2sinθdθdϕ
Also x2+y2=a2sin2θ
So:
Using ∫0πsin3θdθ=34:
a) Definition
For vector field F over oriented surface S:
where n^ is unit normal vector.
b) Example
Find flux of F=zi^+xj^+yk^ through surface S: part of plane x+y+z=1 in first octant
Solution:
Surface: z=1−x−y, x≥0, y≥0, z≥0
Projection in xy-plane: triangle with vertices (0,0), (1,0), (0,1)
Normal vector: ∇(z−1+x+y)=i^+j^+k^
Unit normal (upward): n^=31(i^+j^+k^)
Surface element: dS=1+zx2+zy2dxdy=1+1+1dxdy=3dxdy
On surface: F=zi^+xj^+yk^=(1−x−y)i^+xj^+yk^
Flux:
Area of triangle = 21×1×1=21
So flux = 21
If F=∇ϕ is conservative and C is any curve from A to B, then:
a) Statement
For simple closed curve C enclosing region D in xy-plane:
b) Example
Use Green's theorem to evaluate ∮C(x2ydx+y2dy) where C is triangle with vertices (0,0), (1,0), (1,1)
Solution:
Here P=x2y, Q=y2
By Green's theorem:
Region D: 0≤x≤1, 0≤y≤x
a) Statement
For closed surface S enclosing volume V:
b) Example
Verify divergence theorem for F=xi^+yj^+zk^ over sphere x2+y2+z2=a2
Solution:
LHS (Surface integral):
On sphere, outward normal n^=axi^+yj^+zk^
Surface area = 4πa2
So flux = a×4πa2=4πa3
RHS (Volume integral):
Volume of sphere = 34πa3
So ∭V(∇⋅F)dV=3×34πa3=4πa3
Both sides equal, theorem verified.
a) Statement
For surface S with boundary curve C:
b) Example
Verify Stokes' theorem for F=yi^+zj^+xk^ over hemisphere x2+y2+z2=1, z≥0
Solution:
LHS (Line integral): Boundary is circle x2+y2=1, z=0
Parameterize: x=cost, y=sint, z=0, 0≤t≤2π
On curve: F=yi^+zj^+xk^=sinti^+0j^+costk^
RHS (Surface integral): Need ∇×F
For hemisphere z=1−x2−y2:
Normal vector: n^=zxi^+yj^+zk^
Surface element: dS=z1dxdy
By symmetry, integrals of zx and zy over hemisphere are zero
So:
Both sides equal, theorem verified.
Continuity equation: ∂t∂ρ+∇⋅(ρv)=0
Irrotational flow: ∇×v=0⇒v=∇ϕ
Incompressible flow: ∇⋅v=0
Gauss's law for electricity: ∇⋅E=ϵ0ρ
Gauss's law for magnetism: ∇⋅B=0
Faraday's law: ∇×E=−∂t∂B
Ampere-Maxwell law: ∇×B=μ0J+μ0ϵ0∂t∂E
Heat equation: ∂t∂T=α∇2T
Fourier's law: q=−k∇T
Gravitational field: g=−∇ϕ
Gauss's law for gravity: ∇⋅g=−4πGρ
Coordinates: (ρ,ϕ,z)
Relations: x=ρcosϕ, y=ρsinϕ, z=z
Gradient:
Divergence:
Coordinates: (r,θ,ϕ)
Relations: x=rsinθcosϕ, y=rsinθsinϕ, z=rcosθ
Gradient:
Divergence:
Check if F=(exsiny)i^+(excosy)j^ is conservative.
Solution:
For 2D: Check if ∂y∂P=∂x∂Q
Here P=exsiny, Q=excosy
Equal, so conservative.
For F=x2i^+y2j^+z2k^, find ∇⋅F and ∇×F
Solution:
Divergence:
Curl:
All cross-derivatives are 0, so ∇×F=0
Gradient: ∇f=∂x∂fi^+∂y∂fj^+∂z∂fk^
Divergence: ∇⋅F=∂x∂P+∂y∂Q+∂z∂R
Curl: ∇×F=(∂y∂R−∂z∂Q)i^+(∂z∂P−∂x∂R)j^+(∂x∂Q−∂y∂P)k^
Green: ∮C(Pdx+Qdy)=∬D(∂x∂Q−∂y∂P)dA
Divergence: ∬SF⋅dS=∭V(∇⋅F)dV
Stokes: ∮CF⋅dr=∬S(∇×F)⋅dS
∇×F=0
∮CF⋅dr=0 for all closed C
F=∇ϕ for some ϕ
Confusing gradient, divergence, curl:
Gradient: scalar → vector
Divergence: vector → scalar
Curl: vector → vector
Forgetting parameter ranges in line/surface integrals
Wrong orientation for surface in flux integrals
Incorrect normal vector for surfaces
Misapplying theorems: Check conditions first
Identify the type: Line/surface/volume integral? Which theorem applies?
Check conditions: Conservative? Closed curve/surface?
Choose coordinates: Cartesian/cylindrical/spherical based on symmetry
Compute step by step: Show all work
Verify: Check answer has correct units/dimensions
Gradient: Always produces vector field
Divergence: Always produces scalar field
Curl: Always produces vector field
Conservative: Curl must be zero
Incompressible: Divergence must be zero
This comprehensive theory covers all aspects of vector calculus with detailed explanations and examples, providing complete preparation for the entrance examination.