Find the volume of the solid whose base is the area between the curve y=x^3 and the y axis, from x=0 to y=1, considering that his cross sections, taken perpendicular to the y axis, are squares.

Donna Flynn

Donna Flynn

Answered question

2022-07-21

Finding the Volume of a solid - Application of Integrals - Exercise that is not clear to understand
I've been working on a few exercises and one of them seems not clear, I'm not sure what the author meant in it. Here's the exercise:
Find the volume of the solid whose base is the area between the curve y = x 3 and the y axis, from x = 0 to y = 1, considering that his cross sections, taken perpendicular to the y axis, are squares.

Answer & Explanation

polishxcore5z

polishxcore5z

Beginner2022-07-22Added 14 answers

Step 1
You will need to review volumes obtained when various cross sectional shapes are used.
The typical area-between-curves formula when integrated in x is given as:
s t a r t f i n i s h ( y t o p y b o t t o m ) d x to represent vertical cross sectional lines creating the required "area".
When the cross sections are squares leading to a required volume, you will look at expressions of the form
s t a r t f i n i s h ( y t o p y b o t t o m ) 2 d x, since each cross section is a square with side equal to the distance between the curves.
Step 2
Since the required volume is with respect to the y-axis, you will need to rewrite the curve in terms of y, i.e. x = y 1 / 3 and look for an integral of the form s t a r t f i n i s h ( x r i g h t x l e f t ) 2 d y
Kyle Liu

Kyle Liu

Beginner2022-07-23Added 4 answers

Explanation:
From y = x 3 we have x = y 3 and a cross section at position y is a square of side y 3 and has area A = ( y 3 ) 2 , so the volume is: 0 1 ( y 3 ) 2 d y

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