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Path integral |
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Path integral
Complex analysisThe path integral is a fundamental tool in complex analysis. Suppose U is an open subset of C, γ : [a, b] → U is a rectifiable curve and f : U → C is a function. Then the path integral
If γ is a continuously differentiable curve, the path integral can be evaluated as an integral of a function of a real variable:
Important statements about path integrals are the Cauchy integral theorem and Cauchy's integral formula. Because of the residue theorem, one can often use contour integrals in the complex plane to find integrals of real-valued functions of a real variable (see residue theorem for an example). Example Consider the function f(z)=1/z, and let the contour C be the unit circle about 0, which can be parametrized by eit, with t in [0, 2π]. Substituting, we find Vector calculusIn qualitative terms, a path integral in vector calculus can be thought of as a measure of the effect of a given vector field along a given curve. DefinitionFor some scalar field f : Rn → R, the path (or line) integral on a curve C, parametrized as r(t) with t ∈ [a, b], is defined by : Similarly, for a vector field F : Rn → Rn, the path integral on a curve C, parametrized as r(t) with t ∈ [a, b], is defined by : Path independence If a vector field F is the gradient of a scalar field G, that is, For this reason, a vector field which is the gradient of a scalar field is called path independent. ApplicationsThe path integral has many uses in physics. For example, the work done on a particle traveling on a curve C inside a force field represented as a vector field F is the path integral of F on C. Quantum mechanics The "path integral formulation" of quantum mechanics actually refers not to path integrals in this sense but to functional integrals, that is, integrals over a space of paths, of a function of a possible path. However, path integrals in the sense of this article are important in quantum mechanics; for example, complex contour integration is often used in evaluating probability amplitudes in quantum scattering theory. See also
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