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5solid As Described by The Inequalities Lesson 5

The document provides examples of plotting points in spherical coordinates, identifying surfaces based on their spherical coordinate equations, and sketching solid shapes defined by spherical coordinate inequalities. It includes 3 examples each of plotting points, identifying surfaces, and sketching solids defined by inequalities in spherical coordinates. The key aspects covered are converting between spherical and Cartesian coordinates, recognizing common surfaces like spheres and planes from their equations, and using traces and restrictions to spherical coordinate angles to sketch solid regions.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
53 views13 pages

5solid As Described by The Inequalities Lesson 5

The document provides examples of plotting points in spherical coordinates, identifying surfaces based on their spherical coordinate equations, and sketching solid shapes defined by spherical coordinate inequalities. It includes 3 examples each of plotting points, identifying surfaces, and sketching solids defined by inequalities in spherical coordinates. The key aspects covered are converting between spherical and Cartesian coordinates, recognizing common surfaces like spheres and planes from their equations, and using traces and restrictions to spherical coordinate angles to sketch solid regions.

Uploaded by

Nur Hanna
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Solid as Described by the Inequalities

Lesson 5

At the end of the lesson you should be able to:


1. Plot points whose spherical coordinates are given.
2. Identify the surface whose equation is given.
3. Sketch the solid.

UTP/JBJ
1
Plotting of Spherical Coordinates

The spherical coordinates ( ,  ,  ) of a point P in


space are defined as:
 - distance from P to origin . It is an equation of a
sphere about the origin with radius a
 - same as cylindrical coordinate
 - angle between the positive z-axis and the line
from P to origin

See Figure 1
UTP/JBJ
2
z

( x, y , z )
P (r , , z )
(, , )
  Note :
y a spherical coordinate would
 r be easier to plot in the three
dimensional space if it will be
(x,y,0) changed to rectangular
x coordinates!
(r, , 0)

UTP/JBJ 3
Example 1:
Plot the spherical point (1, 0, 0).

x   sin  cos  1sin 0 cos 0  0 z


y   sin  sin  1sin 0 sin 0  0
1  (1,0,0)
z   cos   1cos 0  1

(,  ,  )  ( x , y , z ) y
( 1, 0 , 0 )  ( 0 , 0 ,1 ) 0

UTP/JBJ
4
Example 2:
 
Plot the spherical point (1 , , ) .
6 6
z
  3
x  1sin cos   0.433
6 6 4
  1

y  1sin sin   0.25 
6 6 4 6

 3 y
z  1 cos   0.866 0
6 2 
6
 
(1, , )  ( 0.433, 0.25 , 0.866) x
6 6

UTP/JBJ 5
Example 3:
 
Plot the spherical point ( 2 , , ) .
3 4

x  2 sin cos 
 2
 0.707
z
4 3 2
  6
y  2 sin sin   1.22
4 3 2
 
z  2 cos  1.414
4 
  4 
(2 , , )  ( 0.707 ,1.22 ,1.414 ) 0
3 4 y
3
x

Where is the spherical point ( 3 , 0 ,  ) ?


UTP/JBJ 6
Surface Identification
Remember this!
It is easier to identify the surface if the given equation
is expressed in rectangular form.

Example 1:
Identify the surface given   3.
2  x 2  y 2  z 2
  x2  y2  z 2  3
9  x 2  y 2  z 2 ( SPHERE )

UTP/JBJ 7
Example 2:
Given  cos   2 , identify the surface.
Recall that
z   cos  therefore,
z  2 ( A PLANE )

Example 3:
Given   2 cos  .

2  2 z
Answer: ( A SPHERE )
x  y  z  2z
2 2 2

UTP/JBJ 8
Example 4:
Given  2 ( sin 2  cos 2   cos 2  ) . 4What is the surface?

Answer: A circular cylinder

Given  2
 6  8  0 . Identify the surface.

TRY!!!

Answer: A sphere

UTP/JBJ 9
Solid with Given Inequalities

To sketch of a solid given some conditions you


should always recall traces. Let us try!
Example 1: z
r2  z  2  r2 2
x2  y2  z  2  x2  y2 2

0 y
2
2

Answer : A circular paraboloid x

UTP/JBJ 10
Example 2:

Given 0 , r  z2
2 z

z  2 ( Plane)
Z=2
rz x2  y2  z
0 y
 x y  z
2 2 2
( Cone) 
z=2
x
The part of the cone which
is in the first octant. z=r

UTP/JBJ 11
Example 3:

Given  2 , 0   
3
z
2  x 2  y 2  z 2
22  x 2  y 2  z 2 2

3

0 y

0 restricts the
3
solid of that section of x
this ball that lies above the
cone   
3
UTP/JBJ
12
Do Nos.
35, 43 , 46, 47, 59, 60
On page 879

UTP/JBJ 13

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