Area of the part of the sphere $x^2+y^2+z^2=36$ limited by the cylinder $x^2+y^2=6y$












0














I have



$$sqrt{1+bigg(frac{partial z}{partial x}bigg)^2+bigg(frac{partial z}{partial y}bigg)^2}=frac{6}{sqrt{36-x^2-y^2}}$$



where $z=sqrt{36-x^2-y^2}$



In the polar form I have to solve



$$frac{sigma}{2}= int_0^pi int_0^{6sin theta} frac{6}{sqrt{36-rho^2}}rho,drho,dtheta=int_0^pibigg[-6sqrt{36-rho^2}bigg]_0^{6sin theta},dtheta=bigg[36theta -36sin thetabigg]_0^pi=^?36pi$$



If I solve this way



$$frac{sigma}{4}= int_0^{frac{pi}{2}} int_0^{6sin theta} frac{6}{sqrt{36-rho^2}}rho,drho,dtheta=18pi-36$$



It gives me the real answer $sigma=72pi-144$



Why this happens?










share|cite|improve this question
























  • I put $=^?$ because WolframAlpha gives the real answer to the same double integral
    – Mauricio J. S.
    Nov 28 '18 at 15:33










  • I'm confused...is the cylinder $x^2 + y^2 = 6$ or $x^2 + y^2 = 6y$. If it's the latter, then I don't see how your inner integral has the correct bounds. (It might well have the correct bounds...I just don't see it!)
    – John Hughes
    Nov 28 '18 at 15:34










  • I have a mistake, I'll fix immediately
    – Mauricio J. S.
    Nov 28 '18 at 15:38
















0














I have



$$sqrt{1+bigg(frac{partial z}{partial x}bigg)^2+bigg(frac{partial z}{partial y}bigg)^2}=frac{6}{sqrt{36-x^2-y^2}}$$



where $z=sqrt{36-x^2-y^2}$



In the polar form I have to solve



$$frac{sigma}{2}= int_0^pi int_0^{6sin theta} frac{6}{sqrt{36-rho^2}}rho,drho,dtheta=int_0^pibigg[-6sqrt{36-rho^2}bigg]_0^{6sin theta},dtheta=bigg[36theta -36sin thetabigg]_0^pi=^?36pi$$



If I solve this way



$$frac{sigma}{4}= int_0^{frac{pi}{2}} int_0^{6sin theta} frac{6}{sqrt{36-rho^2}}rho,drho,dtheta=18pi-36$$



It gives me the real answer $sigma=72pi-144$



Why this happens?










share|cite|improve this question
























  • I put $=^?$ because WolframAlpha gives the real answer to the same double integral
    – Mauricio J. S.
    Nov 28 '18 at 15:33










  • I'm confused...is the cylinder $x^2 + y^2 = 6$ or $x^2 + y^2 = 6y$. If it's the latter, then I don't see how your inner integral has the correct bounds. (It might well have the correct bounds...I just don't see it!)
    – John Hughes
    Nov 28 '18 at 15:34










  • I have a mistake, I'll fix immediately
    – Mauricio J. S.
    Nov 28 '18 at 15:38














0












0








0







I have



$$sqrt{1+bigg(frac{partial z}{partial x}bigg)^2+bigg(frac{partial z}{partial y}bigg)^2}=frac{6}{sqrt{36-x^2-y^2}}$$



where $z=sqrt{36-x^2-y^2}$



In the polar form I have to solve



$$frac{sigma}{2}= int_0^pi int_0^{6sin theta} frac{6}{sqrt{36-rho^2}}rho,drho,dtheta=int_0^pibigg[-6sqrt{36-rho^2}bigg]_0^{6sin theta},dtheta=bigg[36theta -36sin thetabigg]_0^pi=^?36pi$$



If I solve this way



$$frac{sigma}{4}= int_0^{frac{pi}{2}} int_0^{6sin theta} frac{6}{sqrt{36-rho^2}}rho,drho,dtheta=18pi-36$$



It gives me the real answer $sigma=72pi-144$



Why this happens?










share|cite|improve this question















I have



$$sqrt{1+bigg(frac{partial z}{partial x}bigg)^2+bigg(frac{partial z}{partial y}bigg)^2}=frac{6}{sqrt{36-x^2-y^2}}$$



where $z=sqrt{36-x^2-y^2}$



In the polar form I have to solve



$$frac{sigma}{2}= int_0^pi int_0^{6sin theta} frac{6}{sqrt{36-rho^2}}rho,drho,dtheta=int_0^pibigg[-6sqrt{36-rho^2}bigg]_0^{6sin theta},dtheta=bigg[36theta -36sin thetabigg]_0^pi=^?36pi$$



If I solve this way



$$frac{sigma}{4}= int_0^{frac{pi}{2}} int_0^{6sin theta} frac{6}{sqrt{36-rho^2}}rho,drho,dtheta=18pi-36$$



It gives me the real answer $sigma=72pi-144$



Why this happens?







integration multivariable-calculus






share|cite|improve this question















share|cite|improve this question













share|cite|improve this question




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edited Nov 28 '18 at 15:40

























asked Nov 28 '18 at 15:31









Mauricio J. S.

204




204












  • I put $=^?$ because WolframAlpha gives the real answer to the same double integral
    – Mauricio J. S.
    Nov 28 '18 at 15:33










  • I'm confused...is the cylinder $x^2 + y^2 = 6$ or $x^2 + y^2 = 6y$. If it's the latter, then I don't see how your inner integral has the correct bounds. (It might well have the correct bounds...I just don't see it!)
    – John Hughes
    Nov 28 '18 at 15:34










  • I have a mistake, I'll fix immediately
    – Mauricio J. S.
    Nov 28 '18 at 15:38


















  • I put $=^?$ because WolframAlpha gives the real answer to the same double integral
    – Mauricio J. S.
    Nov 28 '18 at 15:33










  • I'm confused...is the cylinder $x^2 + y^2 = 6$ or $x^2 + y^2 = 6y$. If it's the latter, then I don't see how your inner integral has the correct bounds. (It might well have the correct bounds...I just don't see it!)
    – John Hughes
    Nov 28 '18 at 15:34










  • I have a mistake, I'll fix immediately
    – Mauricio J. S.
    Nov 28 '18 at 15:38
















I put $=^?$ because WolframAlpha gives the real answer to the same double integral
– Mauricio J. S.
Nov 28 '18 at 15:33




I put $=^?$ because WolframAlpha gives the real answer to the same double integral
– Mauricio J. S.
Nov 28 '18 at 15:33












I'm confused...is the cylinder $x^2 + y^2 = 6$ or $x^2 + y^2 = 6y$. If it's the latter, then I don't see how your inner integral has the correct bounds. (It might well have the correct bounds...I just don't see it!)
– John Hughes
Nov 28 '18 at 15:34




I'm confused...is the cylinder $x^2 + y^2 = 6$ or $x^2 + y^2 = 6y$. If it's the latter, then I don't see how your inner integral has the correct bounds. (It might well have the correct bounds...I just don't see it!)
– John Hughes
Nov 28 '18 at 15:34












I have a mistake, I'll fix immediately
– Mauricio J. S.
Nov 28 '18 at 15:38




I have a mistake, I'll fix immediately
– Mauricio J. S.
Nov 28 '18 at 15:38










1 Answer
1






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oldest

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4














You simplified a square root incorrectly. When you substitute the limits $rho=0$ and $rho=6sintheta$ to the function $sqrt{36-rho^2}$ at the upper limit you get
$$
sqrt{36-36sin^2theta}=sqrt{36cos^2theta}=6|cos theta|.
$$



It seems to me that you forgot to take the absolute value. Because $costheta$ is negative in the interval $thetain(pi/2,pi]$ this makes a difference.



With the absolute value in place you are more or less forced to do the subintervals $thetain[0,pi/2]$ and $thetain[pi/2,pi]$ separately leading to your other solution.






share|cite|improve this answer























  • How I can know when I have to put the absolute value? thanks very much your answer, it is very useful.
    – Mauricio J. S.
    Nov 28 '18 at 16:50








  • 1




    @MauricioJ.S. The rule that is always valid reads $$sqrt{x^2}=|x|.$$ Whether you can drop the absolute value sign depends on whether $x$ can be negative. Here it can.
    – Jyrki Lahtonen
    Nov 28 '18 at 18:47













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1 Answer
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4














You simplified a square root incorrectly. When you substitute the limits $rho=0$ and $rho=6sintheta$ to the function $sqrt{36-rho^2}$ at the upper limit you get
$$
sqrt{36-36sin^2theta}=sqrt{36cos^2theta}=6|cos theta|.
$$



It seems to me that you forgot to take the absolute value. Because $costheta$ is negative in the interval $thetain(pi/2,pi]$ this makes a difference.



With the absolute value in place you are more or less forced to do the subintervals $thetain[0,pi/2]$ and $thetain[pi/2,pi]$ separately leading to your other solution.






share|cite|improve this answer























  • How I can know when I have to put the absolute value? thanks very much your answer, it is very useful.
    – Mauricio J. S.
    Nov 28 '18 at 16:50








  • 1




    @MauricioJ.S. The rule that is always valid reads $$sqrt{x^2}=|x|.$$ Whether you can drop the absolute value sign depends on whether $x$ can be negative. Here it can.
    – Jyrki Lahtonen
    Nov 28 '18 at 18:47


















4














You simplified a square root incorrectly. When you substitute the limits $rho=0$ and $rho=6sintheta$ to the function $sqrt{36-rho^2}$ at the upper limit you get
$$
sqrt{36-36sin^2theta}=sqrt{36cos^2theta}=6|cos theta|.
$$



It seems to me that you forgot to take the absolute value. Because $costheta$ is negative in the interval $thetain(pi/2,pi]$ this makes a difference.



With the absolute value in place you are more or less forced to do the subintervals $thetain[0,pi/2]$ and $thetain[pi/2,pi]$ separately leading to your other solution.






share|cite|improve this answer























  • How I can know when I have to put the absolute value? thanks very much your answer, it is very useful.
    – Mauricio J. S.
    Nov 28 '18 at 16:50








  • 1




    @MauricioJ.S. The rule that is always valid reads $$sqrt{x^2}=|x|.$$ Whether you can drop the absolute value sign depends on whether $x$ can be negative. Here it can.
    – Jyrki Lahtonen
    Nov 28 '18 at 18:47
















4












4








4






You simplified a square root incorrectly. When you substitute the limits $rho=0$ and $rho=6sintheta$ to the function $sqrt{36-rho^2}$ at the upper limit you get
$$
sqrt{36-36sin^2theta}=sqrt{36cos^2theta}=6|cos theta|.
$$



It seems to me that you forgot to take the absolute value. Because $costheta$ is negative in the interval $thetain(pi/2,pi]$ this makes a difference.



With the absolute value in place you are more or less forced to do the subintervals $thetain[0,pi/2]$ and $thetain[pi/2,pi]$ separately leading to your other solution.






share|cite|improve this answer














You simplified a square root incorrectly. When you substitute the limits $rho=0$ and $rho=6sintheta$ to the function $sqrt{36-rho^2}$ at the upper limit you get
$$
sqrt{36-36sin^2theta}=sqrt{36cos^2theta}=6|cos theta|.
$$



It seems to me that you forgot to take the absolute value. Because $costheta$ is negative in the interval $thetain(pi/2,pi]$ this makes a difference.



With the absolute value in place you are more or less forced to do the subintervals $thetain[0,pi/2]$ and $thetain[pi/2,pi]$ separately leading to your other solution.







share|cite|improve this answer














share|cite|improve this answer



share|cite|improve this answer








edited Nov 28 '18 at 18:49


























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2 revs
Jyrki Lahtonen













  • How I can know when I have to put the absolute value? thanks very much your answer, it is very useful.
    – Mauricio J. S.
    Nov 28 '18 at 16:50








  • 1




    @MauricioJ.S. The rule that is always valid reads $$sqrt{x^2}=|x|.$$ Whether you can drop the absolute value sign depends on whether $x$ can be negative. Here it can.
    – Jyrki Lahtonen
    Nov 28 '18 at 18:47




















  • How I can know when I have to put the absolute value? thanks very much your answer, it is very useful.
    – Mauricio J. S.
    Nov 28 '18 at 16:50








  • 1




    @MauricioJ.S. The rule that is always valid reads $$sqrt{x^2}=|x|.$$ Whether you can drop the absolute value sign depends on whether $x$ can be negative. Here it can.
    – Jyrki Lahtonen
    Nov 28 '18 at 18:47


















How I can know when I have to put the absolute value? thanks very much your answer, it is very useful.
– Mauricio J. S.
Nov 28 '18 at 16:50






How I can know when I have to put the absolute value? thanks very much your answer, it is very useful.
– Mauricio J. S.
Nov 28 '18 at 16:50






1




1




@MauricioJ.S. The rule that is always valid reads $$sqrt{x^2}=|x|.$$ Whether you can drop the absolute value sign depends on whether $x$ can be negative. Here it can.
– Jyrki Lahtonen
Nov 28 '18 at 18:47






@MauricioJ.S. The rule that is always valid reads $$sqrt{x^2}=|x|.$$ Whether you can drop the absolute value sign depends on whether $x$ can be negative. Here it can.
– Jyrki Lahtonen
Nov 28 '18 at 18:47




















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