How Is the Surface Area of a Rotated Curve Calculated Using Integrals?

countzander
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Homework Statement



Consider the surface S formed by rotating the graph of y = f(x) around the x-axis between x = a and x = b. Assume that f(x) ≥ 0 for axb. Show that the surface area of S is 2π times integral of f(x)sqrt(1 + f ' (x)^2) dx from a to b.

http://i.imgur.com/qFeGP.png

Homework Equations



The integral of the magnitude of the cross product of the partial derivatives of parameterization vector, r = r(s,t). The region is R.

The Attempt at a Solution



I tried parameterizing the surface with parameters of x and f(x). The surface I set as g(x,f(x)). But when I took the cross product of that thing, I ended up with a useless statement involving partial derivatives which does not lead to the solution.

Homework Statement


Homework Equations


The Attempt at a Solution

 
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countzander said:

Homework Equations


The integral of the magnitude of the cross product of the partial derivatives of parameterization vector, r = r(s,t). The region is R.
That's not an equation. Can you elaborate?
I tried parameterizing the surface with parameters of x and f(x). The surface I set as g(x,f(x)). But when I took the cross product of that thing, I ended up with a useless statement involving partial derivatives which does not lead to the solution.
Please post details of you working.
 
hi countzander! :smile:
countzander said:
I tried parameterizing the surface with parameters of x and f(x) …

why so complicated? :cry:

just use trig! :smile:

(and f' = tan)
 
http://i52.photobucket.com/albums/g12/countzander/Untitled-1.png
 
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countzander said:

Homework Statement



Consider the surface S formed by rotating the graph of y = f(x) around the x-axis between x = a and x = b. Assume that f(x) ≥ 0 for axb. Show that the surface area of S is 2π times integral of f(x)sqrt(1 + f ' (x)^2) dx from a to b.

http://i.imgur.com/qFeGP.png

Homework Equations



The integral of the magnitude of the cross product of the partial derivatives of parameterization vector, r = r(s,t). The region is R.

The Attempt at a Solution



I tried parameterizing the surface with parameters of x and f(x). The surface I set as g(x,f(x)).

That isn't two parameters. ##x## is free to use as a parameter but then ##f(x)## is determined. You need another parameter if you want to do it that way. I would suggest ##\theta##, the angle of rotation as the second parameter. Express your surface as$$
\vec R(x,\theta) = \langle x, ?, ?\rangle$$where the question marks are the appropriate expressions for ##y## and ##z## in terms of ##x,\, f(x),\, \theta##.
 
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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