Rate of increase of the surface area

afcwestwarrior
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a spherical balloon is being inflated. find the rate of increase of the surface area (S=4 pie r squared) with respect to radius r when r is (A) 1 ft, (B) 2 ft, (C) 3ft.

Here's what i did

i found the derivative of s and i put 4 2R and then i plugged in the numbers in R
and i got 8 ft sq/ft 16 ft sq/ft and 24 ft sq/ft

except I'm not sure if I am doing it right, although those are the right answers i didnt get the units along with them
 
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is there simple algebra involved in this calculus problem
 
are you not given dr/dt or dv/dt?
 
afcwestwarrior said:
a spherical balloon is being inflated. find the rate of increase of the surface area (S=4 pie r squared) with respect to radius r when r is (A) 1 ft, (B) 2 ft, (C) 3ft.

Here's what i did

i found the derivative of s and i put 4 2R and then i plugged in the numbers in R
and i got 8 ft sq/ft 16 ft sq/ft and 24 ft sq/ft

except I'm not sure if I am doing it right, although those are the right answers i didnt get the units along with them

You've got a graph there, simply find the gradient of the slope, that's the rate of increase.

(1,8)
(2,16)
(3,24)
 
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afcwestwarrior said:
a spherical balloon is being inflated. find the rate of increase of the surface area (S=4 pie r squared) with respect to radius r when r is (A) 1 ft, (B) 2 ft, (C) 3ft.

Here's what i did

i found the derivative of s and i put 4 2R and then i plugged in the numbers in R
and i got 8 ft sq/ft 16 ft sq/ft and 24 ft sq/ft

except I'm not sure if I am doing it right, although those are the right answers i didnt get the units along with them

Give more detail about what you did (I, for one, don't know what "i put 4 2R" means!). What is the formula for surface area (I see you give that)? what is its derivative?

Plastic Photon, since the problem asks for the rate of increas eof surface area with respect to r you don't need to know dr/dt.

If the surface area is in square feet and the radius in feet, then the "rate of change of surface area with respect ot radius" is in (square feet)/feet or just feet!
 
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ok so ur saying i don't need to find the derivative of it, ok check this mate,
the i put 4 2 R means that's the derivative of the surface area
 
No, "i put 4 2 R" doesn't mean anything!
 
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