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  2. Green's theorem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green's_theorem

    In vector calculus, Green's theorem relates a line integral around a simple closed curve C to a double integral over the plane region D (surface in ) bounded by C. It is the two-dimensional special case of Stokes' theorem (surface in ). In one dimension, it is equivalent to the fundamental theorem of calculus.

  3. Green's function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green's_function

    Then, the Heaviside step function Θ(xx 0) is a Green's function of L at x 0. Let n = 2 and let the subset be the quarter-plane {(x, y) : x, y ≥ 0} and L be the Laplacian. Also, assume a Dirichlet boundary condition is imposed at x = 0 and a Neumann boundary condition is imposed at y = 0.

  4. Green measure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_measure

    Intuitively, the Green measure of a Borel set H (with respect to a point x and domain D) is the expected length of time that X, having started at x, stays in H before it leaves the domain D. That is, the Green measure of X with respect to D at x, denoted G(x, ⋅), is defined for Borel sets H ⊆ R n by

  5. Line integral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Line_integral

    In mathematics, a line integral is an integral where the function to be integrated is evaluated along a curve. [1] The terms path integral, curve integral, and curvilinear integral are also used; contour integral is used as well, although that is typically reserved for line integrals in the complex plane.

  6. Symmetry of second derivatives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symmetry_of_second_derivatives

    One easy way to establish this theorem (in the case where =, =, and =, which readily entails the result in general) is by applying Green's theorem to the gradient of . An elementary proof for functions on open subsets of the plane is as follows (by a simple reduction, the general case for the theorem of Schwarz easily reduces to the planar case ...

  7. Generalized Stokes theorem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generalized_Stokes_theorem

    In particular, the fundamental theorem of calculus is the special case where the manifold is a line segment, Green’s theorem and Stokes' theorem are the cases of a surface in or , and the divergence theorem is the case of a volume in . [2] Hence, the theorem is sometimes referred to as the fundamental theorem of multivariate calculus.

  8. Logarithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logarithm

    The graph of the natural logarithm (green) and its tangent at x = 1.5 (black) Analytic properties of functions pass to their inverses. [34] Thus, as f(x) = b x is a continuous and differentiable function, so is log b y. Roughly, a continuous function is differentiable if its graph has no sharp "corners".

  9. List of theorems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_theorems

    Graph structure theorem (graph theory) Grauert–Riemenschneider vanishing theorem (algebraic geometry) Great orthogonality theorem (group theory) Green–Tao theorem (number theory) Green's theorem (vector calculus) Grinberg's theorem (graph theory) Gromov's compactness theorem (Riemannian geometry) Gromov's compactness theorem (symplectic ...