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Did you read my tips on how to study and learn Math 1700? If not, here is a link to those important suggestions: Did you read my Tips for Assignment 1? If not, here is a link to those important suggestions: Did you read my Tips for Assignment 2? If not, here is a link to those important suggestions: Did you read my Tips for Assignment 3? If not, here is a link to those important suggestions: Did you read my Tips for Assignment 4? If not, here is a link to those important suggestions: These are tips for the fifth assignment in the Distance/Online Math 1700 course, but I strongly recommend that you do this assignment as homework even if you are taking the classroom lecture section of the course. These assignments are very good (and challenging)
practice. It is possible that you are doing the topics in a different order in the classroom lecture sections, so you may need to wait until later before tackling this assignment. Here is a link to the actual assignment, in case you don't have it: You need to study Lesson 14 (Parametric Equations) and Lesson 15 (Polar Curves) from my Calculus 2 book to prepare for this assignment.
Don't have my book? You can download a free sample of my book and audio lectures containing Lesson 1 and 11: Part (a) expects you to draw the graph strictly by making a table of values, just like my first example I do at the start of Lesson 14. I suggest you find the values of t that give horizontal or vertical tangent lines (there aren't many), then pick at least one
t value that is lower than the t values you find, and at least one t value that is higher, and plot your points. Remember, always connect the dots in order of increasing t, and don't forget to put arrows on the curve to show the direction of motion.
Part (b) is asking you to isolate t in one of the parametric equations and substitute into the other equation to remove t from the problem. Depending on how you isolate t, you either end up with y as a function of x, or x
as a function of y.
Similar to my Lesson 14, questions 1 and 6.
Use the arc length formula for parametric equations that I illustrate in Lesson 14, question 5(d), part (i). Hint: the expression you end up with underneath the square root better be a perfect square (expressible as something in brackets
all-squared).
Use the surface area formula for parametric equations that I illustrate in Lesson 14, question 5(d), part (iii).
Similar to my Lesson 15, question 1(c).
Similar to my Lesson 15, question 4.
Use the formula I use in my Lesson 15, question 2. Note that you have to find the area between the two curves, so first find where the two curves intersect to get your integral's endpoints. With trig, this is often most easily done by inspection. Try theta
= 0, pi/6, pi/4, etc. to find the angles where the two graphs intersect. That is your endpoints, of course. Then it is the area of the outer curve minus the area of the inner curve.
I strongly recommend you sketch the two curves, using tables of values as I teach you in this lesson, so that you can properly visualize the area they describe. The outer curve is the one further from the origin; the inner curve is nearer to the origin. Draw the angle
lines representing the angles of intersection then visualize rotating counterclockwise from the smaller angle to the larger angle, like a radar screen in an air traffic control centre. Visualize the angle line sweeping around the curves, and make sure you find the region where 3sin(theta) is the outer curve. Note that the starting point of your area must be the smaller angle. Note that angle 3pi/2 is also angle -pi/2, for example. Angle pi/2 is also angle
5pi/2.
Use the formula I use in my Lesson 15, question 3. Hint: Factor something out of the square root expression.
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