thesheepdog
New member
- Joined
- Nov 10, 2014
- Messages
- 8
I am new here, so please forgive any math formatting that is not up to spec.
I have the following problem that I need help with: "Find the volume of the solid generated by revolving the region bounded by the given lines and curves about the x-axis.
y=x^2,y=0,x=0,x=3
There are 4 answers on this problem:
1) (81÷4)∗pi
2) 9pi
3) (243÷4)∗pi
4) (243÷5)∗pi
I know that to find the volume, we need to integrate these x/y values.
∫0-3 pix(x^2−0)dx
Then we take the anti-derivative:
pix4÷4
Then we calculate this over the integral by substitution:
pi(3)^4÷4−pi(0)^4÷4
So this brings us to the answer for the area in terms of pi: (81÷4)pi
Is this the correct answer?
I have the following problem that I need help with: "Find the volume of the solid generated by revolving the region bounded by the given lines and curves about the x-axis.
y=x^2,y=0,x=0,x=3
There are 4 answers on this problem:
1) (81÷4)∗pi
2) 9pi
3) (243÷4)∗pi
4) (243÷5)∗pi
I know that to find the volume, we need to integrate these x/y values.
∫0-3 pix(x^2−0)dx
Then we take the anti-derivative:
pix4÷4
Then we calculate this over the integral by substitution:
pi(3)^4÷4−pi(0)^4÷4
So this brings us to the answer for the area in terms of pi: (81÷4)pi
Is this the correct answer?