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I am a little stuck on the following problem:

Use Stokes's Theorem to show that

$$\oint_{C} y ~dx + z ~dy + x ~dz = \sqrt{3} \pi a^2,$$

where $C$ is the suitably oriented intersection of the surfaces $x^2 + y^2 + z^2 = a^2$ and $x + y + z = 0$.

OK, so Stokes's Theorem tells me that:

$$\oint_{C}\vec{F} \cdot d\vec{r} = \iint_{S}\operatorname{curl} \vec{F} \cdot \vec{N} ~dS$$

I have calculated:

$$\operatorname{curl} \vec{F} = -\vec{i} - \vec{j} - \vec{k}.$$

I then figured that on the surface $S$ we must have:

$$\vec{N}dS = \vec{i} + \vec{j} + \vec{k}dxdy$$

since this follows from the equation of the given plane.

However this will then give me:

$$\operatorname{curl} \vec{F} \cdot \vec{N} = -1 -1 -1 = -3$$

And thus I would get, if project this onto the $xy$-plane:

$$\iint_{S} \operatorname{curl} \vec{F} \cdot \vec{N} ~dS = -3 \iint_{A} dA = -3 \pi a^2$$

which is obviously not correct.

I would greatly appreciate it if someone could help me with this. I actually had multivariable calculus a few years ago, and I know that I knew this stuff then. However, now that I need it again I notice that I've become quite rusty.

Thanks in advance :)

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    You should normalize $N$!2012-07-17
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    Thanks. But I am slightly confused, as my book writes that $\vec{N}dS = \pm \frac{\nabla G(x,y,z)}{G_{3}(x,y,z)}$ $dxdy$. (Although I see from this that I should of course drop the minus-sign in front of my given answer, since we here are using the upward normal). Yet this would then give me the answer $3 \pi a^2$2012-07-17
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    @Kristian: If you normalize $N$, you get $\frac{1}{\sqrt{3}}(\vec{i}+\vec{j}+\vec{k})$. After pulling out the normalizing factor (and correctly orienting the curve) you will get $\sqrt{3}\pi a^2$, just as expected.2012-07-17
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    Thank, Arturo. I see of course that when I normalize $\vec{N}$ I get what you write. But isn't $dS = \sqrt{3}$ so that $\vec{N}dS = \frac{1}{\sqrt{3}}(\vec{i} + \vec{j} + \vec{k}) \cdot \sqrt{3} = \vec{i} + \vec{j} + \vec{k}$?2012-07-17
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    I thought like that ,too...2012-07-17
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    Are you pretty sure is $\sqrt3$ ? (can´t be that difficult...)2012-07-17
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    MeAndMath: Yes, that is what the given problem says. Yet, I keep getting $3$ and not $\sqrt{3}$.2012-07-17
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    Have you tried to do in the direct form?from the line integral,to see if is possible?2012-07-17
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    In fact $dS = (rd\phi)dr$ where $\phi$ ranges from $0$ to $2\pi$ and $r$ ranges from $0$ to $a$. It is an infinitesimal area, it cannot be equal to a number.2012-07-17
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    Valentin: According to the textbook I use, $dS = |\frac{\nabla G(x,y,z)}{G_{3}(x,y,z)}|$.2012-07-17
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    Then ,we can simplify it with the $N$,but,anyway...still not helping...We´re missing something....2012-07-17
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    Just a sec:what is the right form of the vector field?Is it : $y i+zj + xk $?2012-07-17
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    Yes that is correct.2012-07-17
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    We have that $C$ is a circumference,isn´t it? and $S$ is a disk.(Damn it,I spend the whole evening on this problem...I don´t know what am I doing wrong!The part where we have $\pi a^2$ is obvious,because is the area element,we have a circle,so is obvious.The thing is withn the $curl N$... )2012-07-17
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    Yes, this question is tormenting me too! Like I said, this is something I knew very well a couple of years ago, and I'm just reviewing it now. C is the curve of intersection between the given sphere and plane. The error must lie, as you say, with the $curl \vec{F} \bullet \vec{N}dS$ part. I am a bit rusty on this, so I merely looked up the various formulas used to calculate these terms. But this gives me $3$ instead of $\sqrt{3}$. Really appreciate your efforts though :)2012-07-17
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    let us [continue this discussion in chat](http://chat.stackexchange.com/rooms/4150/discussion-between-meandmath-and-kristian)2012-07-17

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