CSSA Trials Question (1 Viewer)

Dreamerish*~

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A is a fixed point on a circle centre O, radius 1 cm.

P is a variable point which moves around the circle with a constant speed of one revolution per second.

AOP = θ

(i) Show that /dt = 2π radians per second.
(ii)Find the rate at which the area of ΔAOP is changing when θ = 2π/3.


Thanks. :)
 

physician

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Dreamerish*~ said:
Yes, yes it is. :)

Relative rates.
so sorry... thats the only topic we havn't covered...

by the way which year is this question from?
 

Dreamerish*~

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physician said:
so sorry... thats the only topic we havn't covered...

by the way which year is this question from?
That's ok. :)

1997.

EDIT: LOL, it's ok! I found the answers! :D
 

KFunk

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Dreamerish*~ said:
A is a fixed point on a circle centre O, radius 1 cm.

P is a variable point which moves around the circle with a constant speed of one revolution per second.

AOP = θ

(i) Show that /dt = 2π radians per second.
(ii)Find the rate at which the area of ΔAOP is changing when θ = 2π/3.


Thanks. :)
I can't think of a really solid algebraic way to do i) but basically since the variable point goes through one revolution every second it's rate of change is 2&pi; radians per second i.e. d&theta;/dt = 2&pi; radians s<sup>-1</sup>

ii) Area of triangle = 1/2.a.b.sinC
where a = 1 , b = 1 , C = &theta; so
A = 1/2.sin&theta;
d(A)/d&theta; = 1/2.cos&theta;

dA/dt = dA/d&theta; . d&theta;/dt = &pi; cos&theta;

hence when &theta; = /3 , d&theta;/dt = -&pi;/2 cm<sup>2</sup>s<sup>-1</sup>

Edit: you have the answers so this probably doesn't matter :p
 

Dreamerish*~

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KFunk said:
I can't think of a really solid algebraic way to do i) but basically since the variable point goes through one revolution every second it's rate of change is 2&pi; radians per second i.e. d&theta;/dt = 2&pi; radians s<sup>-1</sup>

ii) Area of triangle = 1/2.a.b.sinC
where a = 1 , b = 1 , C = &theta; so
A = 1/2.sin&theta;
d(A)/d&theta; = 1/2.cos&theta;

dA/dt = dA/d&theta; . d&theta;/dt = &pi; cos&theta;

hence when &theta; = /3 , d&theta;/dt = -&pi;/2 cm<sup>2</sup>s<sup>-1</sup>
Yeah that's what I was trying to find out for (i). I knew how it works, but I can't prove it. The answeris just that since dP/dt is 1 revolution per second, theta changes at 2 pi per second. :rolleyes:
 

Jago

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hey i did that exact same question a few days ago!
 

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