0% found this document useful (0 votes)
5 views14 pages

Assignment 2

The document contains a series of mathematical problems and their solutions, including line integrals, double integrals, and surface area calculations using polar coordinates. Each section presents a different function and the corresponding integrals, with step-by-step evaluations and final results. The problems cover various topics in calculus, such as parametric equations, Jacobians, and surface area formulas.

Uploaded by

akai shuichi
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
5 views14 pages

Assignment 2

The document contains a series of mathematical problems and their solutions, including line integrals, double integrals, and surface area calculations using polar coordinates. Each section presents a different function and the corresponding integrals, with step-by-step evaluations and final results. The problems cover various topics in calculus, such as parametric equations, Jacobians, and surface area formulas.

Uploaded by

akai shuichi
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 14

1.

f = 3e^x + y

x = 3t
y = 2 - 4t

x' = 3
y = -4

ds = sqrt( x'^2 + y'^2 ) = sqrt( 3^2 + (-4)^2 ) = sqrt(9 + 16) = sqrt(25) = 5dt

the line integral of f along C =

INT(f(x,y) * ds) = INT((3e^{3t} + 2 - 4t) * 5) = INT(15e^{3t} + 10 - 20t dt) = 5e^{3t} - 10t^{2} + 10t
=I

now we evaluate for 0 <= t <= 1:

I(1) - I(0):

(5e^{3(1)} - 10(1)^{2} + 10(1)) - (5e^{3(0)} - 10(0)^{2} + 10(0)):

= 5e^{3} - 5

========================================================================
=========================================
2.

f = x + y + 2z

x = 2t
y = 2t + 1
z=t+2

x' = 2
y' = 2
z=1

ds = sqrt( x'^2 + y'^2 + z'^2 ) = sqrt(2^2 + 2^2 + 1^2) = sqrt(4 + 4 + 1) = sqrt(9) = 3 dt

the line integral of f along C =

INT(f(x,y,z) * ds) = INT( (2t) + (2t + 1) + (2(t + 2)) * 3 dt) = INT( (2t + 2t + 1 + 2t + 4) * 3 dt) =
INT(6t + 6t + 3 + 6t + 12 dt) = INT(18t + 15) = 9t^{2} + 15t = I

now we evaluate for 0 <= t <= 1:

I(1) - I(0):

(9(1)^{2} + 15(1)) - (9(0)^{2} + 15(0)) = 9 + 15 = 24

========================================================================
==========================================================

3.

F(tx, ty, tz) . (x,y,z) =

(4t^{7}x^{3}y^{4} + 6tx, 4t^7x^{4}y^{3} + 3t^{2}y^{2}, 2tz))


)

8t^{7}x^{4}y^{4} + 6tx^{2} + 3t^{2}y^{3} + 2tz^2

INT(

8t^{7}x^{4}y^{4} + 6tx^{2} + 3t^{2}y^{3} + 2tz^2


)

= t^{8}x^{4}y^{4} + 3t^{2}x^{2} + t^{3}y^{3} + t^{2}z^{2}

= x^{4}y^{4} + 3x^{2} + y^{3} + z^{2} + C

========================================================================
=================================================================

4. to find this, we can use the formula f(r(b)) - f(r(a)):

f(x,y) = yln(x^2 + 1) + x^3

r = (x,y) = ( tcos((pi)t) - 1, sin(((pi)t)/2) )

range: a <= t <= b = 0 <= t <= 2

r(2) = ( 1, 0)

r(0) = (-1, 0 )

now we substitute:

f(r(2)) = (0)ln((1)^2 + 1) + (1)^3) = 1


f(r(0)) = (0)ln((-1)^2 + 1) + (-1)^3) = -1

f(r(2)) - f(r(0)) = 1 - (-1) = 2

so 2 is the answer

========================================================================
=========================

5.
f(x,y) = (2x)/(x^{4} + 1) + sin((pi)y))

{0 <= x <= 1}

{0 <= y <= 3}

let's find the double integral:

INT( INT( (2x)/(x^{4} + 1) + sin((pi)y)) dy ) dx )

INT( INT( (2x)/(x^{4} + 1) dy ) dx) = INT( (2x)/(x^{4} + 1) * y dx)

= y * INT((2x)/(x^{4} + 1) dx):

u = x^2
du = 2x dx

= y * INT( 1/(u^{2} + 1) du ):

we can use trig substitution:

u = tan 0

du = sec^2(0) d0

= y * INT( 1/tan^{2}(0) + 1) sec^2(0) d0 ) = = y * INT( 1/sec^2(0)) sec^2(0) d0 ) = = y * INT( d0


)=y*0

0 = tan^{-1}(u)

= y * tan^{-1}(u) = y * tan^{-1}(x^2) = I(x,y)​


let's now sub with y and u

I(1,3) - I(0,0)

3 * tan^{-1}(1^2) - 0 = 3tan^-1(1) = 3pi/4

INT ( INT( sin((pi)y)) dy ) dx )

u = (pi)y

du = pi dy

du/pi = dy

INT( sin(u) (du/pi) ) = (1/pi)INT(sin(u) du) = -(1/pi)cos(u) = -(1/pi)cos((pi)y)

-(1/pi)cos((pi)y) = I

I(3) - I(0) = -(1/pi)cos(3pi) + (1/pi)cos(0) = (2/pi)

INT(2/pi dx) = 2x/pi = I

I(1) - I(0) = 2/pi


2/pi + 3pi/4 = 8/4pi + 3pi^2/4pi

= (8 + 3pi^2)/4pi

========================================================================
========================

6.
y = 6x, y = x^2

x^2 = 6x

x^2 - 6x = 0

x(x - 6) = 0

x = 0, 6

so 0 <= x <= 6

if we plug 5 in both curves we get 6(5) = 30, 5^2 = 25, which means x^2 is lower bond of both
curves

so

let's evaluate the double integral:

INT( INT( (xy)dA)) = INT( INT( (xy)dy) dx)


inner integral evaluation:

x^2 <= y <= 6x

INT( xy dy) = xINT(y dy) = x * (y^2/2) = I(y)

let's evaluate I(6x) - I(x^2)

x * ((6x)^2/2) - x * ((x^2)^2/2)

= 18x^3 - x^5/2

now let's evaluate the outer integral:

0 <= x <= 6

= INT(18x^3 - x^5/2 dx) = (9/2)x^4 - (1/12)x^6 = I

let's now evaluate I(6) - I(0)

((9/2)6^4 - (1/12)6^6) - (9/2)x^4 + (1/12)x^6

= ((9/2)6^4 - (1/12)6^6) - 0 = 1944

which is the answer: 1944


========================================================================
=========================

7.

p(x,y) = xcos(y^3)

let's reverse the order, and we get:

0 <= x <= y

0 <= y <= 1

INT( INT( xcos(y^3) dx ) dy )

inner integral:

0 <= x <= y

INT( xcos(y^3) dx ) = (1/2)x^2cox(y^3) = I

now let's evaluate for I(y) - I(0)

= (y^2/2)cos(y^3)

now let's use this in the outer integral:


INT( (y^2/2)cos(y^3) dy)

0 <= y <= 1

u = y^3

du = 3y^2 dy

let's change the upper and lower bound:

u = 0 is lower bound

u = (1)^3 = 1 is upper bound so it didn't change

INT( (1/6)cos(u) du) = (1/6)INT( cos(u) du) = (1/6)sin(u)

now let's evaluate for I(1) - I(0)

(1/6)sin(1) - (1/6)sin(0)

= 1/6sin(1)

done
========================================================================
===================

8.

x >= 0, y >= 0 thus it's in the first quadrant meaning 0 <= theta <= pi/2

x^2/36 + y^2/16 <= 1

x = 6rcos(0)
y = 4rsin(0)

r^2cos^2(0) + r^2sin^2(0) = r^2(cos^2(0) + sin^2(0)) = r^2

meaning r^2 <= 1 meaning 0 <= r <= 1.

dx/dr = 6cos(0)
dx/d0 = -6rsin(0)
dy/dr = 4sin(0)
dy/d0 = 4rcos(0)

now we calculate the jacobian

dx/dr * dy/d0 - (dx/d0 * dy/dr) = 6cos(0) * 4rcos(0) - (-6rsin(0) * 4sin(0))

= 24rcos^2(0) + 24rsin^2(0) = 24r(cos^2(0) + sin^2(0) = 24r

now we have to find Int( Int ( xydA dr) d0)

dA = Jacobian = 24r

Int (Int ( 6rcos(0) * 4rsin(0) * 24r dr ) d0 )

= Int ( 6rcos(0) * 4rsin(0) * 24r dr ) = INT( 576r^3cos(0)sin(0) dr)


= 144r^4cos(0)sin(0) = I

now we evaluate at a and b:

I(1) - (0) = 144cos(0)sin(0) - 0 = 144cos(0)sin(0)

now we evaluate the second integral:

INT( 144cos(0)sin(0) d0 ) = INT (144((1/2)sin(20)) d0 ) = INT ( 72sin(20) d0 )

= 72INT(sin(20) d0 ) = 36INT(sin(u) du) = -36cos(2theta) = I

now we evaluate at 0 <= theta <= pi/2

I(pi/2) - I(0) = -36cos(pi) + 36cos(0) = 36 + 36 = 72

and that's the answer: 72

======================================================================

9.

to find the area of a surface we can use the equation:

INT (INT (

SQRT(fx^2 + fy^2 + 1) dA
))

f = x^2 + y^2

fx = 2x
fy = 2y

x >= 0 that means: -pi/2 <= theta <= pi/2

x^2 + y^2 <= 2 is a circle with a radius of 2 or less, that means r = sqrt(2) that means 0 <= r <=
sqrt(2)

x = rcos(0)
y = rsin(0)

in a circle, x^2 + y^2 = r^2

now let's calculate the inside:

(2x)^2 + (2y)^2 + 1 = 4x^2 + 4y^2 + 1

= 4(x^2 + y^2) + 1 = 4r^2 + 1 = inner of the square root.

let's solve it now:

INT( INT (
sqrt(4(r^2) + 1) dA ))

we are using polar coordinates so we can sub dA = r dr d0

INT( INT (

sqrt(4(r^2) + 1) r dr ) d0)

let's do this first:

INT (

sqrt(4r^2 + 1) r dr )

u = 4r^2 + 1

du = 8r dr

dr = du/(8r)

now the range of r changes from 0 to sqrt(2) to:

u = 4(0) + 1 = 1

u = 4sqrt(2)^2 + 1 = 4 * 2 + 1 = 9

so it 1 <= u <= 9
1/8INT ( sqrt(u) dr ) = 1/8INT(u^{1/2}) = 1/12u^{3/2} = I

now let's sub for u

I(9) - I(1) = 1/12(9)^{3/2} - 1/12(1)^{3/2} = 27/12 - 1/12 = 26/12 = 13/6

that's for the inner integral, let's now solve for the second integral

INT (13/6 d0) = 13(theta)/6 = I

now we solve for I(pi/2) - I(-pi/2)

13(pi/2)/6 - 13(-pi/2)/6

= (13pi/2 + 13pi/2)/6 = 26pi/2/6 = 13pi/6

done

You might also like