Particle in Sphere












0














The position for a particle is random, with uniform distribution on the sphere that has its centre in origin and radius equal to 7. Calculate the expected value of the particle's distance from the origin.



Uniform in this sens should mean



$$
begin{cases}
f(x,y,z) = frac{1}{pi}, sqrt{x^2 + y^2 + z^2} leq 7 \
0, otherwise
end{cases}
$$



But how do I calculate the expected value from here?










share|cite|improve this question



























    0














    The position for a particle is random, with uniform distribution on the sphere that has its centre in origin and radius equal to 7. Calculate the expected value of the particle's distance from the origin.



    Uniform in this sens should mean



    $$
    begin{cases}
    f(x,y,z) = frac{1}{pi}, sqrt{x^2 + y^2 + z^2} leq 7 \
    0, otherwise
    end{cases}
    $$



    But how do I calculate the expected value from here?










    share|cite|improve this question

























      0












      0








      0







      The position for a particle is random, with uniform distribution on the sphere that has its centre in origin and radius equal to 7. Calculate the expected value of the particle's distance from the origin.



      Uniform in this sens should mean



      $$
      begin{cases}
      f(x,y,z) = frac{1}{pi}, sqrt{x^2 + y^2 + z^2} leq 7 \
      0, otherwise
      end{cases}
      $$



      But how do I calculate the expected value from here?










      share|cite|improve this question













      The position for a particle is random, with uniform distribution on the sphere that has its centre in origin and radius equal to 7. Calculate the expected value of the particle's distance from the origin.



      Uniform in this sens should mean



      $$
      begin{cases}
      f(x,y,z) = frac{1}{pi}, sqrt{x^2 + y^2 + z^2} leq 7 \
      0, otherwise
      end{cases}
      $$



      But how do I calculate the expected value from here?







      uniform-distribution expected-value






      share|cite|improve this question













      share|cite|improve this question











      share|cite|improve this question




      share|cite|improve this question










      asked Nov 26 at 22:13









      Kristoffer Jerzy Linder

      316




      316






















          1 Answer
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          1














          By the way, the density should be $f(x,y,z) = frac{1}{frac{4}{3} pi cdot 7^3}$ when $sqrt{x^2+y^2+z^2} le 7$.



          If $R$ is the random distance, then the tail sum formula yields
          $$E[R] = int_0^infty P(R ge r) , dr.$$



          What is $P(R ge r)$?




          $$P(R ge r) = begin{cases}0 & r > 7 \ 1 - frac{r^3}{7^3} & 0 le r le 7end{cases}$$







          share|cite|improve this answer























          • But wait, are you sure? Because $$ int_0^1bigg (1-frac{r^3}{7^3}bigg ) dr = 0.99927 $$ and the answer should be around 5
            – Kristoffer Jerzy Linder
            Nov 26 at 23:24












          • @KristofferJerzyLinder Fixed a typo
            – angryavian
            Nov 26 at 23:45











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          1 Answer
          1






          active

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          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          1














          By the way, the density should be $f(x,y,z) = frac{1}{frac{4}{3} pi cdot 7^3}$ when $sqrt{x^2+y^2+z^2} le 7$.



          If $R$ is the random distance, then the tail sum formula yields
          $$E[R] = int_0^infty P(R ge r) , dr.$$



          What is $P(R ge r)$?




          $$P(R ge r) = begin{cases}0 & r > 7 \ 1 - frac{r^3}{7^3} & 0 le r le 7end{cases}$$







          share|cite|improve this answer























          • But wait, are you sure? Because $$ int_0^1bigg (1-frac{r^3}{7^3}bigg ) dr = 0.99927 $$ and the answer should be around 5
            – Kristoffer Jerzy Linder
            Nov 26 at 23:24












          • @KristofferJerzyLinder Fixed a typo
            – angryavian
            Nov 26 at 23:45
















          1














          By the way, the density should be $f(x,y,z) = frac{1}{frac{4}{3} pi cdot 7^3}$ when $sqrt{x^2+y^2+z^2} le 7$.



          If $R$ is the random distance, then the tail sum formula yields
          $$E[R] = int_0^infty P(R ge r) , dr.$$



          What is $P(R ge r)$?




          $$P(R ge r) = begin{cases}0 & r > 7 \ 1 - frac{r^3}{7^3} & 0 le r le 7end{cases}$$







          share|cite|improve this answer























          • But wait, are you sure? Because $$ int_0^1bigg (1-frac{r^3}{7^3}bigg ) dr = 0.99927 $$ and the answer should be around 5
            – Kristoffer Jerzy Linder
            Nov 26 at 23:24












          • @KristofferJerzyLinder Fixed a typo
            – angryavian
            Nov 26 at 23:45














          1












          1








          1






          By the way, the density should be $f(x,y,z) = frac{1}{frac{4}{3} pi cdot 7^3}$ when $sqrt{x^2+y^2+z^2} le 7$.



          If $R$ is the random distance, then the tail sum formula yields
          $$E[R] = int_0^infty P(R ge r) , dr.$$



          What is $P(R ge r)$?




          $$P(R ge r) = begin{cases}0 & r > 7 \ 1 - frac{r^3}{7^3} & 0 le r le 7end{cases}$$







          share|cite|improve this answer














          By the way, the density should be $f(x,y,z) = frac{1}{frac{4}{3} pi cdot 7^3}$ when $sqrt{x^2+y^2+z^2} le 7$.



          If $R$ is the random distance, then the tail sum formula yields
          $$E[R] = int_0^infty P(R ge r) , dr.$$



          What is $P(R ge r)$?




          $$P(R ge r) = begin{cases}0 & r > 7 \ 1 - frac{r^3}{7^3} & 0 le r le 7end{cases}$$








          share|cite|improve this answer














          share|cite|improve this answer



          share|cite|improve this answer








          edited Nov 26 at 23:44

























          answered Nov 26 at 22:20









          angryavian

          38.7k23180




          38.7k23180












          • But wait, are you sure? Because $$ int_0^1bigg (1-frac{r^3}{7^3}bigg ) dr = 0.99927 $$ and the answer should be around 5
            – Kristoffer Jerzy Linder
            Nov 26 at 23:24












          • @KristofferJerzyLinder Fixed a typo
            – angryavian
            Nov 26 at 23:45


















          • But wait, are you sure? Because $$ int_0^1bigg (1-frac{r^3}{7^3}bigg ) dr = 0.99927 $$ and the answer should be around 5
            – Kristoffer Jerzy Linder
            Nov 26 at 23:24












          • @KristofferJerzyLinder Fixed a typo
            – angryavian
            Nov 26 at 23:45
















          But wait, are you sure? Because $$ int_0^1bigg (1-frac{r^3}{7^3}bigg ) dr = 0.99927 $$ and the answer should be around 5
          – Kristoffer Jerzy Linder
          Nov 26 at 23:24






          But wait, are you sure? Because $$ int_0^1bigg (1-frac{r^3}{7^3}bigg ) dr = 0.99927 $$ and the answer should be around 5
          – Kristoffer Jerzy Linder
          Nov 26 at 23:24














          @KristofferJerzyLinder Fixed a typo
          – angryavian
          Nov 26 at 23:45




          @KristofferJerzyLinder Fixed a typo
          – angryavian
          Nov 26 at 23:45


















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