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Write an integral in polar coordinates equivalent to the following:​

Write an integral in polar coordinates equivalent to the following:​-example-1

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The region is a segment of a circle with radius √2 lying above the line
y=1. In polar coordinates, this line has equation


y = r\sin(\theta) = 1 \implies r = \csc(\theta)

and the circle has equation


x^2+y^2 = r^2 = 2 \implies r=\sqrt2

The two curves meet when


\csc(\theta) = \sqrt2 \implies \sin(\theta) = \frac1{\sqrt2} \implies \theta = \frac\pi4 \text { or } \theta = \frac{3\pi}4

Then the same integral in polar coordinates is


\displaystyle \int_(-1)^1 \int_1^(√(2-x^2)) xy \, dy \, dx = \boxed{\int_(\pi/4)^(3\pi/4) \int_(\csc(\theta))^(\sqrt2) r^3 \cos(\theta) \sin(\theta) \, dr \, d\theta}

User Amir Jalilifard
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