kloudsurfer
Member
Hey,
I was having some trouble with this question:
Find the volume of the solid of a revolution formed when the curve x^2 + y^2=9 is rotated about the x-axis between x=1 and x=3
I kept getting it wrong because i was going
x^2 +y^2 = 9
y = √(9-x^2)
y=3-x
And then I would go on to find the volume (cant be bothered to write it out here lol)...
Anyway, eventually i figured out that I shouldnt have done that last step (in bold), and thats why i kept getting a wrong answer. I now know how to do it and get the right answer, but I still dont know why what i was doing originally doesnt work.
Can someone please explain to me why you cant do that?
Thanks
I was having some trouble with this question:
Find the volume of the solid of a revolution formed when the curve x^2 + y^2=9 is rotated about the x-axis between x=1 and x=3
I kept getting it wrong because i was going
x^2 +y^2 = 9
y = √(9-x^2)
y=3-x
And then I would go on to find the volume (cant be bothered to write it out here lol)...
Anyway, eventually i figured out that I shouldnt have done that last step (in bold), and thats why i kept getting a wrong answer. I now know how to do it and get the right answer, but I still dont know why what i was doing originally doesnt work.
Can someone please explain to me why you cant do that?
Thanks