Given a smooth tensor valued function $\sigma:R^2\rightarrow R^{2\times2}$, I'm trying to show that
$\int_\Omega \nabla\cdot\sigma=\int_{\partial\Omega}\sigma n$,
where $\Omega$ is a connected simple region in $R^2$, $\partial\Omega$ is a closed simple curve along boundary of $\Omega$, and $n$ is a unit vector.
I'm struggling with several points in this problem:
- How can I represent $\sigma$ explicitly?
- How can I explicitly represent $\sigma n$?
- Given that $\nabla\cdot\sigma$ is a vector, would the differential of the left hand side of the equation still be $dxdy$?
- I am told that I can use divergence theorem explicitly, but the only version I'm familiar with applies to integrals whose integrands are scalar quantities? What is the tensor-divergence theorem equivalent?
Any help would be greatly appreciated! :) Thanks.