Average rate of change of a sphere

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on finding the average rate of change of a sphere's volume as the radius increases from 10 cm to 15 cm, using the formula V(r) = (4/3)π(r)^3. Participants clarify that the average rate of change can be calculated simply by the formula (V(15) - V(10)) / (15 - 10), resulting in approximately 1989.675 cm³. There is confusion regarding the use of limits, with some suggesting that it complicates the straightforward calculation. Additionally, the conversation shifts to finding the instantaneous rate of change at a radius of 8 cm, which participants confirm can be derived using calculus, yielding 256π. Overall, the thread emphasizes the importance of understanding both average and instantaneous rates of change in the context of volume calculations for spheres.
thomasrules
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the Volume of a sphere is given by V(r) = \frac{4}{3}\pi(r)^3

Find the average rate of change of volume with respect to radius as the radius changes from 10 cm to 15 cm.

Ok what I tried is: \lim_{r\rightarrow 15} \frac{V(r)-V(a)}{r-a}

P(a,V(a))=(15,14 137)\\ Let\ r=10 \lim_{r\rightarrow 15} \frac{\frac{4}{3}\pi(10)^3-14,137}{10-15} = 1989

and I would do that for 10 to 15 and get the average rate but somethign is wrong here...
 
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if r goes to 15 wouldn't it be wherever there is an r a 15 would go... I think you did it backwards... it looks as if you put "a" where "r" was supposed to go and "r" where "a" is supposed to go.

P(a,V(a))=(15,14 137)\\ Let\ r=10 \lim_{r\rightarrow 15} \frac{\frac{4}{3}\pi(15)^3-frac{4}{3}\pi(10)^3}{15-10} = 1989.675

I am not sure exactly about this... although I do remember doing something similar to this last semester. Is this the whole problem? Because if it wants the rate it would usually be for ex. the sphere is increasing by 1989 cm^3 per min.I don't know if the formula will show up because it is in code right now and I am not 100% sure how this forum works with formulas. Hope this helped some. If it still seems to be wrong send me a message and I'll look at it again.
 
well I guess the formula didn't work lol... how did you get yours up there?
 
The average rate of change as the radius changes from 10 cm to 15 cm is simply

\frac{V(15)-V(10)}{15-10}

No limit, no hocus pocus involved, just plain soustraction and division of numbers.
 
answer says \frac{1900}{3}\pi
 
that is the same as 1989.675, if you want to get an answer like that just keep pie separate.
 
second part is: Find the rate of change of volume when the radius is 8cm...

So that means the instantaneous rgight?
 
hmm... do you have the answer for this one as well? and do you know how to do derivatives? This dose look like it means instantaneous.
 
i got it its 256\pi

Used the instantaneous formula thing, i.e. the long way of derivative
 
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yeah you will learn how to get it easier just by deriving the equation later. Is this a college course or high school? Just wondering because the part you posted in was precalculus. If you get to where you need help again, I wouldn't mind helping. I need a refresher now and then to make sure I don't forget things.
 
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