Divergence Theorem
From Math Images
| Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
|Image=Fountainflux.gif | |Image=Fountainflux.gif | ||
|ImageIntro=The water flowing out of a fountain demonstrates an important property of vector fields, the Divergence Theorem. | |ImageIntro=The water flowing out of a fountain demonstrates an important property of vector fields, the Divergence Theorem. | ||
| - | |ImageDescElem=Consider a fountain like the one pictured, particularly its top layer. The rate that water flows out of the fountain's spout is directly related to the amount of water that flows off the top layer. Because something like water isn't easily compressed like air, if more water is pumped out of the spout, then more water will have to flow over the boundaries of the top layer. This is essentially what The Divergence Theorem states: the | + | |ImageDescElem=Consider a fountain like the one pictured, particularly its top layer. The rate that water flows out of the fountain's spout is directly related to the amount of water that flows off the top layer. Because something like water isn't easily compressed like air, if more water is pumped out of the spout, then more water will have to flow over the boundaries of the top layer. This is essentially what The Divergence Theorem states: the total the fluid being introduced into a volume is equal to the total fluid flowing out of the boundary of the volume. |
|Pre-K=No | |Pre-K=No | ||
|Elementary=Yes | |Elementary=Yes | ||
| Line 20: | Line 20: | ||
The left side of this equation is the sum of the divergence over the entire volume, and the right side of this equation is the sum of the field perpendicular to the volume's boundary at the boundary, which is the flux through the boundary. | The left side of this equation is the sum of the divergence over the entire volume, and the right side of this equation is the sum of the field perpendicular to the volume's boundary at the boundary, which is the flux through the boundary. | ||
| - | + | |other=Some multivariable calculus | |
| - | + | ||
| - | |other= | + | |
|AuthorName=Brendan John | |AuthorName=Brendan John | ||
|SiteURL=http://www.explace.on.ca/V15.html | |SiteURL=http://www.explace.on.ca/V15.html | ||
|Field=Calculus | |Field=Calculus | ||
}} | }} | ||
Revision as of 15:26, 21 May 2009
| Fountain Flux |
|---|
is
,
is the component of
direction. Intuitively, if F has a large positive rate of change in the x direction, the partial derivative with respect to x in this direction will be large, increasing total divergence. The divergence theorem requires that we sum divergence over an entire volume. If this sum is positive, then the field must indicate some movement out of the volume through its boundary, while if this sum is negative, the field must have indicate movement into the volume through its boundary. We use the notion of flux, the flow through a surface, to quantify this movement through the boundary, which itself is a surface.

