J-dizzal
- 394
- 6
Homework Statement
Find the coordinates of the centroid of the uniform area.
Homework Equations
equations for centroid coordinates at the top of my paper.
(2/3k)(58.1)Dr. Courtney said:How does k go from the denominator to the numerator of your integrals as you are evaluating them?
Nathanael said:In one of your steps you basically said ##\sqrt{\frac{y}{k}} =\frac{1}{k}\sqrt{y}##
Also Dr. Courtney's point still stands... it's not 2/3k it's 2/(3k)
Wouldnt it be easier to integrate with respect to y, because of the shaded region is above the curve.Nathanael said:38.7/k is still not right. It should be 38.7/√k
When you find the x-coordinate of the centroid, you should be integrating with respect to x.
The "dA" in the formula ##\bar x=\frac{1}{A}\int xdA## is the area of the thin strip between x and x+dx.
##\bar x=\frac{1}{A}\int xdA##Nathanael said:It's not about what is easier, it's simply wrong.
When you integrate with respect to y, you are taking horizontal strips of area, right? Well when you find the x-coordinate of the centroid you want to take vertical strips of area. The reason for this is that you want to take strips of area which all have the same x-value, and then multiply them by that x-value. You just can't do this when you integrate w.r.t. y.
kx2dx is the area under the curve. Try to figure out a way to find the area above the curve.J-dizzal said:##\bar x=\frac{1}{A}\int xdA##
= ##1/2 \int kx^3dx## does this look ok?