149k views
0 votes
(b) Suppose oil spills from a ruptured tanker and spreads in a circular pattern. If the radius of the oil spill increases at a constant rate of 1 m/s, how fast is the area of the spill increasing when the radius is 26 m?

User Nozzleman
by
3.2k points

2 Answers

2 votes

Step-by-step explanation:

Below is an attachment containing the solution.

(b) Suppose oil spills from a ruptured tanker and spreads in a circular pattern. If-example-1
User Lawitschka
by
3.1k points
5 votes

Answer:

163.4 or
52\pi m2/s

Step-by-step explanation:

The rate of change of the radius is 1 m/s


(dr)/(dt)=1

The area of a circle is


A=\pi r^2

We differentiate this to get the rate of change of the area with the radius:


(dA)/(dr)=2\pi r

The rate of change of the area is


(dA)/(dt) = (dA)/(dr)*(dr)/(dt)=2\pi r *1 = 2\pi r

At r = 26 m,


(dA)/(dt)=2\pi *26=52\pi=163.4

User Matt Smith
by
3.7k points