Vof solid with circular base&right isoceloes perpendicular cross sections

In summary, the problem involves finding the volume of a solid with a circular base and right isosceles triangles as perpendicular cross sections. The base of the solid is described by the equation x^2+y^2=1 and the cross sections are taken between y=-1 and y=1. The solution involves finding the area of each triangular cross section and multiplying it by the thickness, which can be represented by an integral. The height of the triangle is equal to its base, and the base of each triangle extends from a point on the left side of the circle to a point on the right side. Using this method, the correct answer can be obtained.
  • #1
Alixx69
6
0
[[URGENT]]Vof solid with circular base&right isoceloes perpendicular cross sections

Homework Statement



so there is a circle described by the equation x^2+y^2=1 with right isosceles triangles perpendicular to it. each of the triangles is touching the circle with one of its LEGS, with the 90 degree angle and one of the smaller angles touching the perimeter of the circle. now use an integral to find the volume of the solid produced by the adding all of the areas of the infinitely thin triangles from y = -1 to 1.(Just in case my interpretation wasn't as clear to you as it is to me, the actual question is:
"The base of the solid is the disk x^2+y^2 <= 1. The cross-sections by planes perpendicular to the y-axis between y= -1 and y=1 are isosceles right triangles with one LEG on the disk")

Homework Equations



V=int from a to b(A(x)dx)

The Attempt at a Solution



so i got,
A(x)=int from -1 to 1(height of the triangle*base of the triangle)
base = x

and this is where i get tripped up,
if the base, being one of the LEGS of the triangle is x, shouldn't the height(the other LEG of the isosceles triangle) be x too?

that would make the answer:
V(x)=int from -1 to 1((.5x^2)dx)...
but that would mean that , using .5[(x^3)/3] as the antiderivitive and evaluating from -1 to 1, the answer is 1/3

but if you think about it in a different way , its a half of a can that has a r of 1 and a h of 2
and using (pi*r^2*h)/2 you would get 3.14 which is pi

where am i going wrong with this?
 
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  • #3


Alixx69 said:

Homework Statement



so there is a circle described by the equation x^2+y^2=1 with right isosceles triangles perpendicular to it. each of the triangles is touching the circle with one of its LEGS, with the 90 degree angle and one of the smaller angles touching the perimeter of the circle. now use an integral to find the volume of the solid produced by the adding all of the areas of the infinitely thin triangles from y = -1 to 1.


(Just in case my interpretation wasn't as clear to you as it is to me, the actual question is:
"The base of the solid is the disk x^2+y^2 <= 1. The cross-sections by planes perpendicular to the y-axis between y= -1 and y=1 are isosceles right triangles with one LEG on the disk")


Homework Equations



V=int from a to b(A(x)dx)


The Attempt at a Solution



so i got,
A(x)=int from -1 to 1(height of the triangle*base of the triangle)
base = x
If you multiply the base of the triangle by its height, you'll get the area of a square, not a triangle. (I'm using the fact, which you recognize, that each triangle is isosceles, making its two legs the same length.)

What you need to do is to get an expression that gives you the volume of one of the thin triangular pieces, and to do this, you need to understand all of the dimensions of it. The volume of one of the triangular pieces is its area times its thickness. This expression will give you the integrand, the expression in the integral. The thickness plays a role in helping you determine the limits of integration, which I don't think you understand. You wrote them as -1 to 1. Which variable = -1? Which variable = 1?

Alixx69 said:
and this is where i get tripped up,
if the base, being one of the LEGS of the triangle is x, shouldn't the height(the other LEG of the isosceles triangle) be x too?
You're partly right here. Since the triangles are isosceles, the height of each triangle will be equal to its base. But the length of the base is not x. The base of each triangle extends from a point (x1, y) on the left side of the circle to a point (x2, y) on the right side. Can you find an expression that represents this length? When you find it, you can find the area of a typical triangle, which you can multiply by the thickness to get the volume of a typical volume element.
Alixx69 said:
that would make the answer:
V(x)=int from -1 to 1((.5x^2)dx)...
but that would mean that , using .5[(x^3)/3] as the antiderivitive and evaluating from -1 to 1, the answer is 1/3
I get a value that's quite a bit bigger.
Alixx69 said:
but if you think about it in a different way , its a half of a can that has a r of 1 and a h of 2
and using (pi*r^2*h)/2 you would get 3.14 which is pi

where am i going wrong with this?

That seems like a reasonable approach, but doesn't apply to this problem. If you sliced the can in half diagonally, the sliced edge would be an ellipse that touched the circular base at just one point. In this problem, every triangle's hypotenuse touches the circular base.
 
  • #4


Mark44 said:
If you multiply the base of the triangle by its height, you'll get the area of a square, not a triangle. (I'm using the fact, which you recognize, that each triangle is isosceles, making its two legs the same length.)
i meant the hight being being height and the base being the area of the circle, but what you said got me thinking...
so the height being the value y of the solved equation x^2+y^2=r^2(r is the radius) which is y=sqrt(r^2-x^2)
and the base being the area of the circle which is pi*r^2
then it would be int from -1 to 1((pi*r^2)(sqrt(r^2-x^2))dx?
Mark44 said:
That seems like a reasonable approach, but doesn't apply to this problem. If you sliced the can in half diagonally, the sliced edge would be an ellipse that touched the circular base at just one point. In this problem, every triangle's hypotenuse touches the circular base.

no the circles LEG touches the base,, from the side, one of the cross sections looks like:
|\
|...\
|...\
******
with the lines made of "|" and "*" being the same length
and the line of "\" being the hypotenuse and of a longer length
(the periods were used for spacing reasons)
 
  • #5


Alixx69 said:
i meant the hight being being height and the base being the area of the circle, but what you said got me thinking...
so the height being the value y of the solved equation x^2+y^2=r^2(r is the radius) which is y=sqrt(r^2-x^2)
and the base being the area of the circle which is pi*r^2
then it would be int from -1 to 1((pi*r^2)(sqrt(r^2-x^2))dx?
The height of the triangle is not the y value on the circle. The height of each triangle is the same as the base. BTW, you know what the radius of the circle is, so there's no point in introducing another variable r when you already know it.

I've given you some pointers on how to set up the integral in my previous post, so take a careful look at what I wrote.

Alixx69 said:
no the circles LEG touches the base,, from the side, one of the cross sections looks like:
|\
|...\
|...\
******
with the lines made of "|" and "*" being the same length
and the line of "\" being the hypotenuse and of a longer length
(the periods were used for spacing reasons)
I think you meant the triangle's leg touches the base. I have a similar picture, but it's 3D. In any case, the solid described in this problem is not half of a cylinder.
 
  • #6


Mark44 said:
The height of the triangle is not the y value on the circle. The height of each triangle is the same as the base. BTW, you know what the radius of the circle is, so there's no point in introducing another variable r when you already know it.
For the triangle cross sections
V = A*h
h = dx
A=.*l*w
l = w = sqrt(1-x^2)
is that right?
would that make the integral
V=int from -1 to 1(.5(2*sqrt(1-x^2)))?
that gives me an answer of .5pi

but I am so sure the answer is pi because vv
Mark44 said:
I think you meant the triangle's leg touches the base. I have a similar picture, but it's 3D. In any case, the solid described in this problem is not half of a cylinder.
how can it not be half a cylinder, if you cut a cylinder in half, diagonally, you have two identical pieces with the volume of Pi*r^2 all over 2

and because

in my book it says the answer can be found by
V = int from 0 to 2(2Xsqrt(2*r*x-x^2))dx
and the answer to that is pi
but i have no idea how they got there, how did they?
and why are they using 0 to 2 instead of -1 to 1?
 
  • #7


Alixx69 said:
For the triangle cross sections
V = A*h
h = dx

No, the thickness is not dx. The bases of the triangles are all parallel to the x-axis, so the thickness of each one is [tex]\Delta[/tex]y.

Alixx69 said:
A=.*l*w

Your formula for area is wrong. If you meant .5*l*w, that would be correct. You have a period in what you wrote, so maybe you meant to write .5 but got in a hurry and left it out.

Alixx69 said:
l = w = sqrt(1-x^2)
is that right?

No. The base of each triangle extends from the left side of the circle to its right side, so w = x - (-x) = 2x.
The height of each triangle is the same as its width, so h = 2x.
The area of each triangle is 1/2 * (2x) * (2x) = 2x^2.
The thickness of each triangle is [tex]\Delta[/tex]y.
So [tex]\Delta[/tex] = 2x^2 * [tex]\Delta[/tex]y.
Since your volume element involves [tex]\Delta[/tex]y, you will need to convert 2x^2 into an expression in y. This should be easy to do, since the endpoints of each base are on the circle, whose equation you know.
Alixx69 said:
would that make the integral
V=int from -1 to 1(.5(2*sqrt(1-x^2)))?
that gives me an answer of .5pi

but I am so sure the answer is pi because vv

Because vv?
Alixx69 said:
how can it not be half a cylinder, if you cut a cylinder in half, diagonally, you have two identical pieces with the volume of Pi*r^2 all over 2

I've given you a reason why the solid in this problem is not a half cylinder, but here it is again. If you cut a cylinder in half diagonally, the edge of the cut is in the shape of an ellipse. This ellipse touches the base at a single point, (1, 0, 0). The ellipse touches a single point at the top of the cylinder (-1, 0, 2).

For the solid you're working with, every triangle touches the right half of the circular base (assuming the right angles of the triangles are on the left, which is the way you and I have represented things). This is different from what it would be if you sliced the cylinder in half diagonally.
Alixx69 said:
and because

in my book it says the answer can be found by
V = int from 0 to 2(2Xsqrt(2*r*x-x^2))dx
and the answer to that is pi
but i have no idea how they got there, how did they?
and why are they using 0 to 2 instead of -1 to 1?

That's a good question. Integrating from 0 to 2 makes no sense in this problem. Two possibilities are 1) the answer you're looking at isn't the one for the problem you're working on, or 2) the answer in your book is wrong, which I guarantee has happened in a lot of books.
Mark
 
  • #8


Alixx69 said:
For the triangle cross sections
V = A*h
h = dx

No, the thickness is not dx. The bases of the triangles are all parallel to the x-axis, so the thickness of each one is delta y.

Alixx69 said:
A=.*l*w

Your formula for area is wrong. If you meant .5*l*w, that would be correct. You have a period in what you wrote, so maybe you meant to write .5 but got in a hurry and left it out.

Alixx69 said:
l = w = sqrt(1-x^2)
is that right?

No. The base of each triangle extends from the left side of the circle to its right side, so w = x - (-x) = 2x.
The height of each triangle is the same as its width, so h = 2x.
The area of each triangle is 1/2 * (2x) * (2x) = 2x^2.
The thickness of each triangle is delta y.
So delta V = 2x^2 * delta y.
Since your volume element involves delta y, you will need to convert 2x^2 into an expression in y. This should be easy to do, since the endpoints of each base are on the circle, whose equation you know.

Alixx69 said:
would that make the integral
V=int from -1 to 1(.5(2*sqrt(1-x^2)))?
that gives me an answer of .5pi

but I am so sure the answer is pi because vv

Because vv?
Alixx69 said:
how can it not be half a cylinder, if you cut a cylinder in half, diagonally, you have two identical pieces with the volume of Pi*r^2 all over 2

I've given you a reason why the solid in this problem is not a half cylinder, but here it is again. If you cut a cylinder in half diagonally, the edge of the cut is in the shape of an ellipse. This ellipse touches the base at a single point, (1, 0, 0). The ellipse touches a single point at the top of the cylinder (-1, 0, 2).

For the solid you're working with, every triangle touches the right half of the circular base (assuming the right angles of the triangles are on the left, which is the way you and I have represented things). This is different from what it would be if you sliced the cylinder in half diagonally.
Alixx69 said:
and because

in my book it says the answer can be found by
V = int from 0 to 2(2Xsqrt(2*r*x-x^2))dx
and the answer to that is pi
but i have no idea how they got there, how did they?
and why are they using 0 to 2 instead of -1 to 1?

That's a good question. Integrating from 0 to 2 makes no sense in this problem. Two possibilities are 1) the answer you're looking at isn't the one for the problem you're working on, or 2) the answer in your book is wrong, which I guarantee has happened in a lot of books.
Mark
 

1. What is a Vof solid with circular base&right isoceloes perpendicular cross sections?

A Vof solid with circular base&right isoceloes perpendicular cross sections is a three-dimensional shape that has a circular base and perpendicular cross sections that are isosceles triangles. This shape can also be called a cone.

2. What are the properties of a Vof solid with circular base&right isoceloes perpendicular cross sections?

The properties of a Vof solid with circular base&right isoceloes perpendicular cross sections include a circular base, a point at the top called the apex, and perpendicular cross sections that are all congruent isosceles triangles. It also has a curved surface that tapers towards the apex.

3. How is the volume of a Vof solid with circular base&right isoceloes perpendicular cross sections calculated?

The volume of a Vof solid with circular base&right isoceloes perpendicular cross sections can be calculated using the formula V = (1/3)πr2h, where r is the radius of the circular base and h is the height of the cone.

4. What is the difference between a right cone and an oblique cone?

The main difference between a right cone and an oblique cone is the position of the apex in relation to the base. In a right cone, the apex is directly above the center of the circular base, while in an oblique cone, the apex is off-center.

5. How is a Vof solid with circular base&right isoceloes perpendicular cross sections used in real life?

A Vof solid with circular base&right isoceloes perpendicular cross sections is commonly used in construction and engineering for shapes such as traffic cones, megaphones, and ice cream cones. It is also used in mathematics and geometry to teach concepts such as volume and surface area.

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