Find the volume common to the sphere x^{2}+y^{2}+z^{2}=16 and cylinder x^{2}+y^{2}=4y.

Howard Nelson

Howard Nelson

Answered question

2022-11-12

Using Symmetry for finding volume
I have a confusion regarding the symmetry of the volume in the following question.
Find the volume common to the sphere x 2 + y 2 + z 2 = 16 and cylinder x 2 + y 2 = 4 y .
The author used polar coordinates x = r c o s θ and y = r s i n θ and does something like this:
Required volume V = 4 0 π / 2 0 4 s i n θ ( 16 r 2 ) 1 / 2 r d r d θ . The reason for multiplying by 4 is the symmetry of the solid w.r.t. xy-plane.
My point of confusion is that this solid cannot be cut into 4 identical parts, so how it can be multiplied by 4?

Answer & Explanation

Calvin Maddox

Calvin Maddox

Beginner2022-11-13Added 15 answers

Step 1
My point of confusion is that this solid cannot be cut into 4 identical parts
Sure it can.
The sphere is centered at the origin, and the axis of the cylinder (which has radius 2) intersects (0,2) in the x y plane.
Step 2
Slice it in half with the z = 0 plane. Then slice it again with the x = 0 plane.
These are reflected in the limits of integration.
Jadon Johnson

Jadon Johnson

Beginner2022-11-14Added 3 answers

Explanation:
The volume can be cut into 4 identical parts. See that both volume are simetric for each quadrant. That's why the angle variation is from 0 to π / 2.

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