337,397 views
35 votes
35 votes
A solid lies between planes perpendicular to the​ y-axis at
y=0 and
y=4. The​ cross-sections perpendicular to the​ y-axis are circular disks with diameters running from the​ y-axis to the parabola
x=√(10) y^2. Find the volume of the solid.

User Ali Rehman
by
2.5k points

1 Answer

23 votes
23 votes

For any given
0\le y\le4, a cross section in that plane is a circle whose diameter is
x=√(10)\,y^2 with thickness
\Delta y. Such a cross section contributes a volume of
\pi \left(\frac x2\right)^2 \, \Delta y = \frac{5\pi}2 y^4 \, \Delta y.

As
\Delta y\to0 and the number of cross sectional cylindrical disks increases without bound, the infinite sum of their volumes converge to the volume of the solid, given by the definite integral


\displaystyle \frac{5\pi}2 \int_0^4 y^4 \, dy = \frac{5\pi}2 \cdot \frac{4^5}5 = \boxed{512\pi}

User XTheWolf
by
3.4k points
Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.