- #1
atomsmyth
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Hello, everyone. I've used this forum several times in the past for help with problems or just to see other vantage points on a subject. This is my first post, so please bare with me in trying to format my post correctly. I'm studying for my final exam in Calculus III next week and am working some problem types I'm sure will be on there. The first one I had a bit of difficulty working through is this surface integral.
Find the area of the surface defined by the part of the cone z=√{x2+y2} that lies between the plane y=x and y=x2.
∫|rxχry|dA = ∫√{x2/(x2+y2) + y2/(x2+y2) +1}dydx
So I converted to polar coordinates:
x=rcosθ y=rsinθ
0 ≤ r ≤ tanθ/cosθ
0≤θ≤ π/4
And actually as I was typing this out..I realized I forgot to leave the sq.rt in my integrand...*sigh*
My answer came out to 2...but I know that's wrong!
Have I set it up correctly so far?
∫√{cos2θ + sin2θ +1}r drdθ
Actually...looking at it now, I believe the only change to my answer if I did include the sq.rt, would be that my answer is √2?
Thank you guy for any help; I'll double check my work with the sq.rt symbol in my calculations.
I'm actually not worried about taking the integral, just the set up.
My professor has the formula as ∫f(x,y,z(x,y))*√{(dz/dx)2+(dz/dy)2+1}dA but working through the concepts myself, I believe I set it up correctly?
Thanks again!
(I tried using the "complex" symbols and obviously didn't know how to make them look good...so spent 15 minutes rewriting most of this, so let me know if something doesn't look quite right!)
Homework Statement
Find the area of the surface defined by the part of the cone z=√{x2+y2} that lies between the plane y=x and y=x2.
Homework Equations
∫|rxχry|dA = ∫√{x2/(x2+y2) + y2/(x2+y2) +1}dydx
The Attempt at a Solution
So I converted to polar coordinates:
x=rcosθ y=rsinθ
0 ≤ r ≤ tanθ/cosθ
0≤θ≤ π/4
And actually as I was typing this out..I realized I forgot to leave the sq.rt in my integrand...*sigh*
My answer came out to 2...but I know that's wrong!
Have I set it up correctly so far?
∫√{cos2θ + sin2θ +1}r drdθ
Actually...looking at it now, I believe the only change to my answer if I did include the sq.rt, would be that my answer is √2?
Thank you guy for any help; I'll double check my work with the sq.rt symbol in my calculations.
I'm actually not worried about taking the integral, just the set up.
My professor has the formula as ∫f(x,y,z(x,y))*√{(dz/dx)2+(dz/dy)2+1}dA but working through the concepts myself, I believe I set it up correctly?
Thanks again!
(I tried using the "complex" symbols and obviously didn't know how to make them look good...so spent 15 minutes rewriting most of this, so let me know if something doesn't look quite right!)