How to evaluate int 2x-3y dA using change of variables

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on evaluating the integral of 2x-3y over a specified region using a change of variables. The Jacobian was calculated as -1/5, and the limits of integration were determined to be 1 to 2 for u and 2 to 5 for v. A participant initially set up the integral incorrectly, leading to confusion over obtaining a negative result. Clarification was provided that a negative integral value is valid due to the nature of the function being integrated. The conversation highlights the importance of careful integration limits and the implications of the Jacobian's sign.
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Let R be the region bounded by the graphs of x+y=1, x+y=2, 2x-3y=2, and 2x-3y+5. Use the change of variables:
<br /> x=1/5(3u+v)
y=1/5(2u-v)
to evaluate the integral:
<br /> \iint(2x-3y)\,dA<br />

I found the jachobian to be -1/5
and the limits of integration to be
1<=u<=2
2<=v<=5

so i set up the integral like this:
<br /> \frac{-1}{5}\int_{2}^{5}\int_{2}^{1} vdv

and I get -21/5 which doesn't seem right(a negitive number??),what am I doing wrong?
 
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I'm getting -21/10, but that's just because you forgot a 1/2 in the integration. I am wondering, though, why your bounds of integration on u are going from 2 to 1 instead of 1 to 2, especially since you don't evalute the integral as such.

What's wrong with a negative number? The integral in u-v obviously isn't going to be negative, and the Jacobian is in fact negative, so obviously the answer should be negative. From the x-y integral, we're integrating 2x-3y. If y is sufficiently large compared to x, the integral will be negative, as in this case.

--J
 
Oh sorry the 2 to 1 is just a typo , and lol yea it would be negitive (have been doing to many volume problems lately)

thanks for the help
 
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