Respuesta :
Since S is closed, you can use the divergence theorem, which says
[tex]\displaystyle\iint_S \vec F(x,y,z) \cdot \mathrm d\vec S=\iiint_R \mathrm{div}\vec F(x,y,z)\,\mathrm dV[/tex]
where R is the interior of the surface S.
We have
div F (x, y, z) = ∂/∂x (0) + ∂/∂y (y) + ∂/∂z (-z) = 1 - 1 = 0
so the flux would be 0.
In this exercise we have to calculate the flux by the divergent theorem:
The flux would be ZERO
Since S is closed, you can use the divergence theorem, which says:
[tex]\int\limits\int\limits_s {F(x,y,z} \, ds= \int\limits \int\limits\int\limits_R {divF(x, y, z)} \, dv[/tex]
where R is the interior of the surface S. We have:
[tex]\nabla F (x, y, z) = 1-1= 0[/tex]
so the flux would be ZERO.
See more about vectorial calculus at : brainly.com/question/6960786