I want to express the volume of a sphere with a radius r as an integral that adds up each infinitesimally thick disc within the volume. So I have dV = A(x) dx, where A(x) is the area of the disc that is at coordinate x. I'm having trouble finding this function in terms of r. Remember, r is the radius of the sphere. At x=0, A = pi r^2, and at x=r, A = 0. The bounds of the integral should be -r to r I believe. But what is A(x)?

Domianpv

Domianpv

Answered question

2022-09-29

How to express volume of a sphere as a sum of infinitesimally thick discs?
I want to express the volume of a sphere with a radius r as an integral that adds up each infinitesimally thick disc within the volume. So I have d V = A ( x ) d x, where A(x) is the area of the disc that is at coordinate x. I'm having trouble finding this function in terms of r. Remember, r is the radius of the sphere. At x = 0 , A = π r 2 , and at x = r , A = 0. The bounds of the integral should be -r to r I believe. But what is A(x)?

Answer & Explanation

Jordyn Valdez

Jordyn Valdez

Beginner2022-09-30Added 8 answers

Explanation:
V = π ( r 2 x 2 ) δ x = π r r ( r 2 x 2 ) d x
A little integral calculus and you will recover the well known result. V S = 4 3 π r 3

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