Integration Help, Please (1 Viewer)

xMaNx

...
Joined
Apr 7, 2009
Messages
786
Gender
Male
HSC
2010
1. Find the area bounded by the curve y = 9 - x^2 and the x axis between x = 0 and x = 6

2. Find the area of the region bounded by the curve y = 2x - x^2, the line y = 4-2x and the y axis.

3. Find the area enclosed by the curve x = -y^2 + 7y - 10 and the y axis.

4. Find the area bounded by y = sqrt (x - 4), the y axis and the lines y = 1 and y = 2.


I've been trying for the last hour but am stuck on these questions, any assistance such as a method to tackle them or worked solutions is greatly appreciated.

Thanks
 

obliscape

New Member
Joined
May 5, 2010
Messages
13
Gender
Female
HSC
2010
Well no point giving you answers since you won't be learning.
Finding the area is the practically the same as definite integrals.
So you take your equation, add 1 to the power, divide by the new power, put it in square brackets, write your limits, then you sub your limits in. Upper limit - lower limit.
Hence
y = 9-x^2 => In b/w 0 and 6 of 9-x^2 dx
= [ 9x - x^3/3]0...6
= [9(6) - (6)^3/3] - [9(0) - 0^3/3]
=...

For question 2 you have 2 equations. So you need to equate them to find their points of intersection to find your limits - but you get x limits so sub into equations to find y-values. Then you sketch both graphs and you take the area below the top curve MINUS the area below the bottom curve. But again since your question asks for y-axis, you need to make x the subject (rearrange both equations) and then integrate as usual, using y limits.

Question 3 it says the curve and the y-axis, questions like that require you to factorise the equation so that you can find your limits.
Factorise x = -y^2 + 7x - 10 => (y-2) (5-y)
So you do:
In b/w -5 and 2 of -y^2 + 7x - 10 dx (x is already the subject, finding about y-axis)
Integrate as normal

Question 4 basically the same, draw your curve to see. Make x the subject and integrate.
With some questions you have to be careful that the curve goes above and below the x axis or whatever, when they do you need to do 2 separate areas with 2 different sets of limits.

Hope this somewhat helped...
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top