thetasaurus
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It is known that the area of a sector of a polar curve is
\frac{1}{2}\int r^{2} d \theta
This of course comes from the method of finding the area of an arc geometrically, by multiplying the area of the circle by the fraction we want
\frac{\theta}{2\pi}\pi r^{2}
Today I learned how to calculate the arc length of a polar curve. The method is similar to the Cartesian method (by integrating ds), where
ds = \sqrt{r^{2}+ \left(\frac{dr}{dθ}\right)^{2}}
I found this odd, considering the parallels between area in calculus and geometry. I figured it would be based on the geometric arc length formula, where the circumference is multiplied by the fraction of the total circle
\frac{\theta}{2\pi} 2 \pi r
Thus giving θr. In order to integrate small pieces of arc with respect to θ as defined by r(θ) (analogous to summing the area of small sectors), we have
\int r dθ
However this doesn't work, and I don't know why. The geometric formulas both integrals are derived from are correct, but this formula doesn't give you the arc of a polar curve. Does anyone know why it doesn't work? Better yet is there a way to fix it?
\frac{1}{2}\int r^{2} d \theta
This of course comes from the method of finding the area of an arc geometrically, by multiplying the area of the circle by the fraction we want
\frac{\theta}{2\pi}\pi r^{2}
Today I learned how to calculate the arc length of a polar curve. The method is similar to the Cartesian method (by integrating ds), where
ds = \sqrt{r^{2}+ \left(\frac{dr}{dθ}\right)^{2}}
I found this odd, considering the parallels between area in calculus and geometry. I figured it would be based on the geometric arc length formula, where the circumference is multiplied by the fraction of the total circle
\frac{\theta}{2\pi} 2 \pi r
Thus giving θr. In order to integrate small pieces of arc with respect to θ as defined by r(θ) (analogous to summing the area of small sectors), we have
\int r dθ
However this doesn't work, and I don't know why. The geometric formulas both integrals are derived from are correct, but this formula doesn't give you the arc of a polar curve. Does anyone know why it doesn't work? Better yet is there a way to fix it?