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Vector calculus (also called vector analysis) is a field of mathematics concerned with multivariable real analysis of vectors in an inner product space of two or more dimensions (some results — those that involve the cross product — can only be applied to three dimensions). It consists of a suite of formulae and problem solving techniques very useful for engineering and physics. Vector analysis has its origin in quaternion analysis, and was formulated by the American engineer J. Willard Gibbs and the British engineer Oliver Heaviside. Vector calculus is concerned with scalar fields, which associate a scalar to every point in space, and vector fields, which associate a vector to every point in space. For example, the temperature of a swimming pool is a scalar field: to each point we associate a scalar value of temperature. The water flow in the same pool is a vector field: to each point we associate a velocity vector. Vector operationsVector calculus studies various differential operators defined on scalar or vector fields, which are typically expressed in terms of the del operator (
A quantity called the Jacobian is useful for studying functions when both the domain and range of the function are multivariable, such as a change of variables during integration. TheoremsLikewise, there are several important theorems related to these operators which generalize the fundamental theorem of calculus to higher dimensions:
The use of vector calculus may require the handedness of the coordinate system to be taken into account (see cross product and handedness for more detail). Most of the analytic results are easily understood, in a more general form, using the machinery of differential geometry, of which vector calculus forms a subset. See also
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