area=int. e^(3x)-2 dx from 0 to 1dawso said:Find the exact area enclosed between the curve y=e^(3x) - 2, the x axis and the lines x=0 and x=1
i swear the texbook is wrong, wat do u guys get>
No, sorry lol.FinalFantasy said:Find the exact area enclosed between the curve y=e^(3x) - 2, the x axis and the lines x=0 and x=1
at y=0, 2=e^(3x)
ln2=3x
x=(ln2)\3
area=-int. (e^(3x)-2)dx from 0 to (ln2)\3+int. (e^(3x)-2) dx from (ln2)\3 to 1
=-[(1\3)e^(3x)-2x] from 0 to (ln2)\3+[(1\3)e^(3x)-2x] from (ln2)\3 to 1
=-[(1\3)e^(ln2)-2(ln2)\3-(1\3)]+[(1\3)e^(ln2)-2(ln2)\3-(e³\3-2)]
=-2\3+2(ln2)\3+(1\3)+2\3-2(ln2)\3-e³\3+2
=1\3-e³\3+2
=(7-e³)\3 units squared
is dat rite?
"so you will have to find the area between x=0 and x=~.22 (below the x-axis) and add this to the area between x=~.22 and x=1 (above the x-axis)"Trev said:No, sorry lol.
You have to take into consideration that it crosses the x-axis around x=.22 (just used Graphmatica to see this), so you will have to find the area between x=0 and x=~.22 (below the x-axis) and add this to the area between x=~.22 and x=1 (above the x-axis)
If you tested the answer you got FinalFantasy [(7-e³)\3] you would see that it is negative, and area can't be of that nature!
dats the thing i got up there at the very first postTrev said:Using the intervals dawso mentioned; here is my answer:
(ln2)/3 (ln2)/3
∫ (e<sup>3x</sup>-2)dx + ∫ (e<sup>3x</sup>-2)dx
0 0
[(e<sup>3x</sup>)/3 - 2x] (ln2)/3 | 0 + [(e<sup>3x</sup>)/3 - 2x] 1 | (ln2)/3
[(e<sup>ln2</sup>)/3 - (2ln2)/3 - 1/3] + [(e<sup>3</sup>)/3 - 2 - (e<sup>ln2</sup>)/3 + (2ln2)/3]
=e<sup>3</sup>/3 - 7/3
Which I am quite sure is the correct answer... Integration is great!
^^^EDIT: Sorry about the screwed up nature of the working in the beginning, hopefully you get the drift!
wat does da answer say den?dawso said:yeah thats wat i got 2, hm.........