The fundamental theorem of line integrals (FTLI) is the multivariable analog of the fundamental theorem of calculus.

If is a gradient field (with continuously differentiable) and is a smooth curve from point to point , then

Integrating the gradient along a curve gives the difference of at the endpoints. Same theorem as the FTC, one dimension higher.

Proof

Parameterize by , , with , . Define the composition . By the multivariable chain rule,

So the integrand of the line integral is exactly , and by the ordinary FTC

The theorem is just chain rule plus FTC.

Three immediate consequences

1. Path independence. The right side depends only on the endpoints , not on the path. Two different curves from to in the same domain give the same value of .

2. Closed loops give zero. If is closed (), then

3. Computational shortcut. Once you know , you skip the parameterize-and-integrate procedure entirely: just evaluate at the endpoints and subtract.

When FTLI applies (and when it doesn’t)

FTLI requires to be a gradient field — i.e., conservative. The cross-partial test (zero curl on a simply connected domain) is how you check.

For non-conservative fields, FTLI doesn’t apply. You have to parameterize and integrate. The path matters.

Worked example

on . Check: . Conservative.

Find potential: . Then , so . Potential .

For any path from to :

Verify along the parabola : , , , dot , integral . ✓

Same answer along the L-shape from to to : along -axis ; along -axis at . Total . ✓

In the FTC family

FTLI is the second rung of a ladder of theorems, each generalizing the FTC to one higher dimension:

TheoremBoundary integralInterior integralGeometry
FTC0D bdry, 1D interior
FTLI0D bdry, 1D curve in 3D
Green’s theorem (circ)1D bdry, 2D plane
Stokes’ theorem1D bdry, 2D surface in 3D
Divergence theorem2D bdry, 3D volume

All of these are the same statement at successive dimensions: integrating a derivative on the inside equals integrating the original on the boundary. In modern mathematics they all collapse into one theorem on differential forms, the generalized Stokes’ theorem .