Surface area bounded by 2 different planes

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chetzread
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Homework Statement


Find the surface area of portion of plane x + y + z = 3 that lies above the disc (x^2) + (y^2) < 2 in the first octant ...

Homework Equations

The Attempt at a Solution


Here's the solution provided by the author ...
I think it's wrong ... I think it should be the green coloured area + the black area ...

If it's only the black area , then the problem is find the surface area of portion of plane x + y + z = 3 that lies above the cylinder (x^2) + (y^2) < 2 in the first octant..
 
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chetzread said:

Homework Statement


Find the surface area of portion of plane x + y + z = 3 that lies above the disc (x^2) + (y^2) < 2 in the first octant ...

Homework Equations

The Attempt at a Solution


Here's the solution provided by the author ...
I think it's wrong ... I think it should be the green coloured area + the black area ...
No, it's just the black area.
chetzread said:
If it's only the black area , then the problem is find the surface area of portion of plane x + y + z = 3 that lies above the cylinder (x^2) + (y^2) < 2 in the first octant..
That's not what they wrote. The disc they described consists of all the points in the x-y plane that lie inside the circle ##x^2 + y^2 = 2##.
 
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Mark44 said:
No, it's just the black area.
That's not what they wrote. The disc they described consists of all the points in the x-y plane that lie inside the circle ##x^2 + y^2 = 2##.
The disc here refers to the circle with radius 2 lie on the xy plane where z = 0?
 
chetzread said:
The disc here refers to the circle with radius 2 lie on the xy plane where z = 0?
Almost -- the radius is ##\sqrt{2}##. And yes, the disc is in the x-y plane.