Area under inverse graphs (1 Viewer)

alez

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In my ext test, we had to prove the area under sin^-1(x/3) + pi/2 =3pi
We were supposed to draw a rectangle or whatever and do half the area of that but i just changed it to sin(x/3) + pi/2 and integrated that, and it worked
But did it just work for this instance or will it work in others?
 

tommykins

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回复: Area under inverse graphs

alez said:
In my ext test, we had to prove the area under sin^-1(x/3) + pi/2 =3pi
We were supposed to draw a rectangle or whatever and do half the area of that but i just changed it to sin(x/3) + pi/2 and integrated that, and it worked
But did it just work for this instance or will it work in others?
You cannot just randomly change a graph, you will not score any marks for it.

The graph of asin(x/3) + pi/2 is different from sin(x/3) + pi/2, you've just changed the question completely.
 

conics2008

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Re: 回复: Area under inverse graphs

what you did was correct buddy..

because if you look at the arcsin(x) and the normal sin(x) their basically the same but your y values become your x values..

what you did was the proper way to solve it...

tommy thats how you solve it.. he didn't even change the question..

see if

y=arc sin(x/3) finding the area of that you would need to find the yint because these were your old x intercept..

therefore siny=x/3 >> x=3siny <<<< integrate this...
 
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tommykins

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回复: Re: 回复: Area under inverse graphs

conics2008 said:
what you did was correct buddy..

because if you look at the arcsin(x) and the normal sin(x) their basically the same but your y values become your x values..

what you did was the proper way to solve it...

tommy thats how you solve it.. he didn't even change the question..

see if

y=arc sin(x/3) finding the area of that you would need to find the yint because these were your old x intercept..

therefore siny=x/3 >> x=3siny <<<< integrate this...
I know that they're similar, but he said he changed it sin(x/3) and not sin(y/3) which got me confused.

Your response was better than mine, kudos.
 

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