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adartsesirhc
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This is a problem I got from a Stanford class in calc 3:
Let f(x,y,z)=xyz+3. Find an equation of the level surface that passes through the point (1,-2,0).
This is as far as I have gotten:
The constant for the level surface will be k = xyz + 3 = (1)(-2)(0) + 3 = 3.
The equation is thus 3 = xyz + 3, or xyz = 0.
From this, I understand that the level surface will consist of the coordinate axes, but is there any way to parametrize or otherwise explicitly define this? If not, should xyz = 0 be sufficient as an equation of the level curve? Thanks!
Let f(x,y,z)=xyz+3. Find an equation of the level surface that passes through the point (1,-2,0).
This is as far as I have gotten:
The constant for the level surface will be k = xyz + 3 = (1)(-2)(0) + 3 = 3.
The equation is thus 3 = xyz + 3, or xyz = 0.
From this, I understand that the level surface will consist of the coordinate axes, but is there any way to parametrize or otherwise explicitly define this? If not, should xyz = 0 be sufficient as an equation of the level curve? Thanks!