volume as integral
The volume of a solid of revolution (http://planetmath.org/VolumeOfSolidOfRevolution) can be obtained from
where the integrand is the area of the intersection disc of the solid of revolution and a plane perpendicular to the axis of revolution at a certain value of . This volume formula may be generalized to an analogous formula containing instead of the area a more general intersection area obtained from a given solid by cutting it with a set of parallel planes determined by the parameter on a certain axis. One must assume that the function is continuous on an interval where and correspond to the “ends” of the solid. If the -axis forms an angle (http://planetmath.org/AngleBetweenTwoLines) with the normal line of those planes, then we have the volume formula of the form
Title | volume as integral |
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Canonical name | VolumeAsIntegral |
Date of creation | 2013-03-22 17:20:44 |
Last modified on | 2013-03-22 17:20:44 |
Owner | pahio (2872) |
Last modified by | pahio (2872) |
Numerical id | 9 |
Author | pahio (2872) |
Entry type | Topic |
Classification | msc 51M25 |
Classification | msc 51-00 |
Related topic | Volume |
Related topic | VolumeOfSolidOfRevolution |
Related topic | RiemannMultipleIntegral |
Related topic | ExampleOfRiemannTripleIntegral |