Calculus II Volumes: Cory Robinson & Blake Moyer With Advisor Jeremy Becnel, PH.D
Calculus II Volumes: Cory Robinson & Blake Moyer With Advisor Jeremy Becnel, PH.D
Calculus II Volumes: Cory Robinson & Blake Moyer With Advisor Jeremy Becnel, PH.D
Cory Robinson & Blake Moyer with advisor Jeremy Becnel, Ph.D
Department of Mathematics & Statistics
Stephen F. Austin State University
Now our approximation of
volume can be obtained using
the formula
Calculus II Volumes
In Calculus II, we learned how to calculate the volume of a solid
formed by revolving a function around the x or y axis of
a 2 dimensional graph. Take the function R(x) in Figure
1. Revolving R(x) around the x axis, the solid formed has
circular cross-sections. The radius of a circular cross-section is
the distance from the x axis to R(x), so the the area of the
cross-sections is A(x) = R(x)2.
Figure 1:
lim
x0 k=1
which translates to
Z b
R(x) x,
R(x)2dx.
Main Project
n
X
R(u) u.
k=1
u = 1 + m2 x
where m is the slope of the line y = mx + b.
Now we only want to rotate f (x) in the interval [A, B] along the
u axis, but we must project the interval [A, B] from the
u axis onto the x axis which allows us to sum our areas in
the interval [a, b] of the x axis. We divide [A, B] into n
subintervals, thus we have n areas to sum. The radius, R(u), of
each subinterval is given by the length of the perpendicular line
1
lk : y mxk = m (x xk ) between the u axis and f (x). So
in terms of x our radius is R(xk ). Now we can compute
2
R(xk ) u as described, and summing up these values we have
our approximate volume
n
X
2
V =
R(xk ) 1 + m2 x
k=1
Integration Formula
u
cos()
sin()
x
= ,
sin() cos()
y
v
to help us find an integral for the volume with respect to the
1 y
1
uaxis. Using trigonometry we find = tan ( x ) = tan (m).
Plugging into the rotation matrix we have
numerical
technique and,
develop an integral formula
Numerical Technique
The idea here is to treat the line y = mx + b "like" the x axis.
We call the line y = mx + b the u axis, and have our radius
function in terms of u. Now we can sum the areas of our crosssections in terms of u instead of x which we would normally do.
=
1
1
sin(tan (m)) cos(tan (m))
Our integral will now be of the form
Z
R(u)2du.
1
m
2
2
1+m
1+m
.
m
1
1+m2 1+m2
Referring to Figure 4;
integrating with respect
to the u axis our
bounds of integration will
be in [a0, b0], but
projecting this interval
onto the x axis our
bounds of integration
with respect to x will be
Figure 4: Rotation of Figure 3
in [a, b]. Now we can
can compute an exact volume using the integral
Z b
References
Thank You to : Jeremy Becnel, Ph.D. SFASU
Calculus: Early Vectors;
Linear Algebra (4th
Stewart, James
Edition); Friedberg, S, Insel,
A, Spence, L
Linear Algebra with
Applications (7th Edition); Sage 4.7; sagemath.org
Leon, Stephen
LATEX
Mathematica 7.0