Reverse Integral and Evaluation: A Trick Question?

  • Thread starter Thread starter NINHARDCOREFAN
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Test
NINHARDCOREFAN
Messages
118
Reaction score
0
One question on it was reverse the following integral and then evaluate it:

\int_{0}^{\pi}\int_{x^2}^{\pi^2} x^3y dydx

So I got the following reversed integral:
\int_{0}^{\pi^2}\int_{-\sqrt{y}}^{\sqrt{y}} x^3y dxdy

When you first evaluate in respect to x you get 0, am I doing something wrong?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
minor mistake really... the second integral should be
\int_0^{\pi^2}\int_0^{\sqrt{y}} x^3 y \partial x \partial y
I really doubt you would lose a lot of marks

unless I've made a mistake which is possible
 
Yeah, as always, drawing out your region really helps. This is an interesting part of calculus where you can actually visualize things... unlike many other math courses.
 
Damn it, I put -sqrt(y) because in the book, the same problem (with x^2 in the lower bound of the first integral) like it put -sqrt(y) in the lower bound for it's solution. I would get lot of points taken off... it's a 15 point problem, the professors are harsh, i would get taken off -10 or something like that
 
The book problem...

The book problem was:
\int_{-2}^{2}\int_{x^2}^{4} x^2y dydx

Their answer was:
\int_{0}^{4}\int_{-\sqrt{y}}^{\sqrt{y}} x^2y dydx

Why was there a -sqrt(y) in this problem?
 
The reason for that comes from the fact that part of your domain for the region extends into the dreaded negative x.
 
and might i ask, did you mean to interchange the differential elements in the second integrand?

And also, NIN rocks!
 
Last edited:
Yes, I meant to do that. Damn it! I should have changed there right then because the problem would have never come out to zero. Oh well. Thanks.
 
Back
Top