Asked by COFFEE
                A steady wind blows a kite due west. The kite's height above ground from horizontal position x = 0 to x = 80 ft is given by the following. 
y = 150 - (1/40)(x-50)^2
Find the distance traveled by the kite.
y = 150 - (1/40)(x-50)^2
y = 150 - (1/40)(x-50)(x-50)
y = 150 - (1/40)x^2 + (5/2)x + 125/2
y = (-1/40)x^2 + (5/2)x + 425/2
y' = (-1/20)x + 5/2
(y')^2 = ((-1/20)x + 5/2)^2
(y')^2 = (1/400)x^2 - (1/4)x + 25/4
Length = Integral from 0 to 80 of:
Sqrt[1+(1/400)x^2 - (1/4)x + 25/4]
Sqrt[(1/400)x^2 - (1/4)x + 29/4]
How would I integrate this? Is this the correct procedure? Thanks.
You can calculate the derivative directly as:
y' = -2 (1/40)(x-50)
using the chain rule. Then you find:
1 + y'^2 = 1 + 1/400 (x-50)^2
Which is the same as what you got. However, to compute the integral, you need to write it in this form anyway:
Integral sqrt[1 + 1/400 (x-50)^2] dx
put x = 20 y + 50:
Integral 20 sqrt[1 + y^2] dy
Substitute y = Sinh(t) in here. The square root beomes a hyperbolic cosine, you get another hyperbolic cosine from the integration measure dy.
The integral of cosh^2 can be computed by using that it is a sum of exp(t) and
exp(-t) The square of this is just a sum of exponentials which you can integrate term by term.
            
        y = 150 - (1/40)(x-50)^2
Find the distance traveled by the kite.
y = 150 - (1/40)(x-50)^2
y = 150 - (1/40)(x-50)(x-50)
y = 150 - (1/40)x^2 + (5/2)x + 125/2
y = (-1/40)x^2 + (5/2)x + 425/2
y' = (-1/20)x + 5/2
(y')^2 = ((-1/20)x + 5/2)^2
(y')^2 = (1/400)x^2 - (1/4)x + 25/4
Length = Integral from 0 to 80 of:
Sqrt[1+(1/400)x^2 - (1/4)x + 25/4]
Sqrt[(1/400)x^2 - (1/4)x + 29/4]
How would I integrate this? Is this the correct procedure? Thanks.
You can calculate the derivative directly as:
y' = -2 (1/40)(x-50)
using the chain rule. Then you find:
1 + y'^2 = 1 + 1/400 (x-50)^2
Which is the same as what you got. However, to compute the integral, you need to write it in this form anyway:
Integral sqrt[1 + 1/400 (x-50)^2] dx
put x = 20 y + 50:
Integral 20 sqrt[1 + y^2] dy
Substitute y = Sinh(t) in here. The square root beomes a hyperbolic cosine, you get another hyperbolic cosine from the integration measure dy.
The integral of cosh^2 can be computed by using that it is a sum of exp(t) and
exp(-t) The square of this is just a sum of exponentials which you can integrate term by term.
Answers
                    Answered by
            Anonymous
            
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