Radius probability of random cut hemisphere.

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the average length of the radius of a randomly cut cross-section of a hemisphere, particularly one that includes the pole. A numerical approach yielded a result of 0.7855 times the original radius. The analytical solution involves integrating the function sqrt(1-x^2) from 0 to R, leading to the formula πR/4 for the average radius. The complexity of the integral is acknowledged, with one participant noting their reliance on Mathematica for assistance. The conversation highlights the blend of numerical and analytical methods in solving geometric probability problems.
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Imagine viewing a hemisphere normal to the equator such that it looks like a circile with the full radius of the hemisphere. Now randomly section or cut the hemisphere in a manner a tomato is sliced. If we only consider the portion of the hemisphere that contains the pole we should be generating a smaller radius then the full radius given we actually cut something off.

My question is the following:
What is the average length of the radius of a randomly cut cross-section?

I did this numerically and obtained 0.7855 of the original radius. What is the analytical approach? Thanks.
 
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Just do some integration .
You will get
\frac{\pi R}{4}
where R is the radius of the sphere
 
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Ah I see, I just integrate sqrt(1-x^2) from 0 to R. That's a tough integral though for a guy who hasn't done much calculus in 3 years, I was lazy and used mathematica to obtain the solution. Makes me feel like I would be useless in a deserted island. Thanks for the help.
 

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