Changing cartesian integrals to equivalent polar integrals.

soccerboy10
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Homework Statement



6...y
∫...∫ x dx dy
0 ...0

The Attempt at a Solution


for reference: π=pi

6...y
∫...∫ x dx dy
0 ...0

y=6=x=6. rcosΘ=6 r=6/cosΘ
goes to

π/2 6secΘ
∫ ...∫... r cosΘ r dr dΘ
π/4...0

π/2.....r=6secΘ
∫ ... [((r^3)/3)cosΘ] dΘ
π/4......r=0

π/2
∫ ...72 sec^2 Θ dΘ
π/4

72tan(π/2) - 72tan(π/4)

last i checked, tan(π/2) was undefined. where did i undergo an error?
 
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soccerboy10 said:

Homework Statement



6...y
∫...∫ x dx dy
0 ...0

The Attempt at a Solution


for reference: π=pi

6...y
∫...∫ x dx dy
0 ...0

y=6=x=6. rcosΘ=6 r=6/cosΘ
goes to

π/2 6secΘ
∫ ...∫... r cosΘ r dr dΘ
π/4...0
The upper limit of integration for r is wrong. The region over which integration is taking place is the triangle bounded by the y axis, the line y = x, and the line y = 6. Along this horizontal line, r = 6 cscΘ.

soccerboy10 said:
π/2.....r=6secΘ
∫ ... [((r^3)/3)cosΘ] dΘ
π/4......r=0

π/2
∫ ...72 sec^2 Θ dΘ
π/4

72tan(π/2) - 72tan(π/4)

last i checked, tan(π/2) was undefined. where did i undergo an error?
 
how do you integrate csc(cubed) cos?
 
Last edited:
Please take a look at what I said in my previous post. The integrand is NOT sec3(Θ)cos(Θ)
 
my apologies been a long day studying. problem ended out fine.
 
Not to dig up an old thread, but I have this same problem. I thought this would be better than making an entirely new post. I follow the problem, but am confused as to how the bounds of integration for r were found? I drew the picture, and have the triangle bounded by y=6 at the top, the y axis, and line y=x. I can easily get theta from pi/4 to pi/2, but I'm struggling with finding r. Any advice? Also, this is something I've had issues with on a lot of polar coordinate problems. So, if anyone has a more general explanation as to r, instead of just giving an answer for r's bounds in this problem, that would be greatly appreciated!
 
There are two things I don't understand about this problem. First, when finding the nth root of a number, there should in theory be n solutions. However, the formula produces n+1 roots. Here is how. The first root is simply ##\left(r\right)^{\left(\frac{1}{n}\right)}##. Then you multiply this first root by n additional expressions given by the formula, as you go through k=0,1,...n-1. So you end up with n+1 roots, which cannot be correct. Let me illustrate what I mean. For this...
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