If a circle's area gets increased at the rate of 2 $cm^2. s^-1$ .Then what will be the increase rate of it's radius after $frac2811$ seconds?

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If a circle's area gets increased at the rate of 2 $cm^2. s^-1$ .Then what will be the increase rate of it's radius after $frac2811$ seconds?



My Try : $fracdsdt= 2pi r fracdrdt$ so we can write $2pi r fracdrdt = 2$. Can anyone help me out with this problem?










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  • What dimension of the circle is being increased? (and the rate needs to be per second).
    – MRobinson
    Aug 31 at 7:42






  • 1




    @MRobinson I think the OP is referring to increase in area. Also, I have corrected the unit (edit pending review).
    – Devashish Kaushik
    Aug 31 at 7:44











  • @DevashishKaushik of course, I hadn't noticed the $cm^2$! Thank you
    – MRobinson
    Aug 31 at 7:51














up vote
1
down vote

favorite
1












If a circle's area gets increased at the rate of 2 $cm^2. s^-1$ .Then what will be the increase rate of it's radius after $frac2811$ seconds?



My Try : $fracdsdt= 2pi r fracdrdt$ so we can write $2pi r fracdrdt = 2$. Can anyone help me out with this problem?










share|cite|improve this question























  • What dimension of the circle is being increased? (and the rate needs to be per second).
    – MRobinson
    Aug 31 at 7:42






  • 1




    @MRobinson I think the OP is referring to increase in area. Also, I have corrected the unit (edit pending review).
    – Devashish Kaushik
    Aug 31 at 7:44











  • @DevashishKaushik of course, I hadn't noticed the $cm^2$! Thank you
    – MRobinson
    Aug 31 at 7:51












up vote
1
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
1
down vote

favorite
1






1





If a circle's area gets increased at the rate of 2 $cm^2. s^-1$ .Then what will be the increase rate of it's radius after $frac2811$ seconds?



My Try : $fracdsdt= 2pi r fracdrdt$ so we can write $2pi r fracdrdt = 2$. Can anyone help me out with this problem?










share|cite|improve this question















If a circle's area gets increased at the rate of 2 $cm^2. s^-1$ .Then what will be the increase rate of it's radius after $frac2811$ seconds?



My Try : $fracdsdt= 2pi r fracdrdt$ so we can write $2pi r fracdrdt = 2$. Can anyone help me out with this problem?







calculus derivatives






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share|cite|improve this question













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edited Aug 31 at 10:35









MRobinson

53914




53914










asked Aug 31 at 7:37









cmi

936110




936110











  • What dimension of the circle is being increased? (and the rate needs to be per second).
    – MRobinson
    Aug 31 at 7:42






  • 1




    @MRobinson I think the OP is referring to increase in area. Also, I have corrected the unit (edit pending review).
    – Devashish Kaushik
    Aug 31 at 7:44











  • @DevashishKaushik of course, I hadn't noticed the $cm^2$! Thank you
    – MRobinson
    Aug 31 at 7:51
















  • What dimension of the circle is being increased? (and the rate needs to be per second).
    – MRobinson
    Aug 31 at 7:42






  • 1




    @MRobinson I think the OP is referring to increase in area. Also, I have corrected the unit (edit pending review).
    – Devashish Kaushik
    Aug 31 at 7:44











  • @DevashishKaushik of course, I hadn't noticed the $cm^2$! Thank you
    – MRobinson
    Aug 31 at 7:51















What dimension of the circle is being increased? (and the rate needs to be per second).
– MRobinson
Aug 31 at 7:42




What dimension of the circle is being increased? (and the rate needs to be per second).
– MRobinson
Aug 31 at 7:42




1




1




@MRobinson I think the OP is referring to increase in area. Also, I have corrected the unit (edit pending review).
– Devashish Kaushik
Aug 31 at 7:44





@MRobinson I think the OP is referring to increase in area. Also, I have corrected the unit (edit pending review).
– Devashish Kaushik
Aug 31 at 7:44













@DevashishKaushik of course, I hadn't noticed the $cm^2$! Thank you
– MRobinson
Aug 31 at 7:51




@DevashishKaushik of course, I hadn't noticed the $cm^2$! Thank you
– MRobinson
Aug 31 at 7:51










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

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up vote
1
down vote



accepted










Yes your way is correct indeed we have



$$A(t)=pi r(t)^2implies A'(t)=2 pi r(t)r'(t)=2 implies r'(t)=frac1pi r(t)$$



and therefore



$$fracdrdt=frac1pi r implies rdr=frac 1 pi dt implies frac12r^2=frac t pi+C implies r(t)=sqrtfrac2tpi+C$$



and assuming $r(0)=r_0 implies C=r_0^2$ that is




$$r'(t)=frac1sqrt2pi t+pi r_0^2$$







share|cite|improve this answer






















  • @gimsu The OP had asked for increase rate $dr/dt$ of the radius , not the radius itself. It might be norw useful to point out that he just had to plug in the given values in the expression he reached, instead of repeating the calculation and finding the radius. ( No offence intended ) :-)
    – Devashish Kaushik
    Aug 31 at 7:59











  • @DevashishKaushik I get your point but as you can see the rate $r'(t)$ depends upon $r(t)$ therefore we need to find $r(t)$ to solve the problem completely. For example assuming $r(0)=0$ we can explicitely find a value for the rate at $t=28/11 s$.
    – gimusi
    Aug 31 at 8:00











  • Of course, I was referring to the fact that seeing that the OP reached $drover dt = f(R)$ , it might be better to give him a slight hint instead of the succeeding steps in their entirety. I am sorry if it seemed like I was suggesting that your solution was incorrect.
    – Devashish Kaushik
    Aug 31 at 8:22











  • @DevashishKaushik I didn't have that idea about your kind observation. Thanks
    – gimusi
    Aug 31 at 8:29










  • I think $r(0) = r_0$@gimusi
    – cmi
    Aug 31 at 8:46










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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
1
down vote



accepted










Yes your way is correct indeed we have



$$A(t)=pi r(t)^2implies A'(t)=2 pi r(t)r'(t)=2 implies r'(t)=frac1pi r(t)$$



and therefore



$$fracdrdt=frac1pi r implies rdr=frac 1 pi dt implies frac12r^2=frac t pi+C implies r(t)=sqrtfrac2tpi+C$$



and assuming $r(0)=r_0 implies C=r_0^2$ that is




$$r'(t)=frac1sqrt2pi t+pi r_0^2$$







share|cite|improve this answer






















  • @gimsu The OP had asked for increase rate $dr/dt$ of the radius , not the radius itself. It might be norw useful to point out that he just had to plug in the given values in the expression he reached, instead of repeating the calculation and finding the radius. ( No offence intended ) :-)
    – Devashish Kaushik
    Aug 31 at 7:59











  • @DevashishKaushik I get your point but as you can see the rate $r'(t)$ depends upon $r(t)$ therefore we need to find $r(t)$ to solve the problem completely. For example assuming $r(0)=0$ we can explicitely find a value for the rate at $t=28/11 s$.
    – gimusi
    Aug 31 at 8:00











  • Of course, I was referring to the fact that seeing that the OP reached $drover dt = f(R)$ , it might be better to give him a slight hint instead of the succeeding steps in their entirety. I am sorry if it seemed like I was suggesting that your solution was incorrect.
    – Devashish Kaushik
    Aug 31 at 8:22











  • @DevashishKaushik I didn't have that idea about your kind observation. Thanks
    – gimusi
    Aug 31 at 8:29










  • I think $r(0) = r_0$@gimusi
    – cmi
    Aug 31 at 8:46














up vote
1
down vote



accepted










Yes your way is correct indeed we have



$$A(t)=pi r(t)^2implies A'(t)=2 pi r(t)r'(t)=2 implies r'(t)=frac1pi r(t)$$



and therefore



$$fracdrdt=frac1pi r implies rdr=frac 1 pi dt implies frac12r^2=frac t pi+C implies r(t)=sqrtfrac2tpi+C$$



and assuming $r(0)=r_0 implies C=r_0^2$ that is




$$r'(t)=frac1sqrt2pi t+pi r_0^2$$







share|cite|improve this answer






















  • @gimsu The OP had asked for increase rate $dr/dt$ of the radius , not the radius itself. It might be norw useful to point out that he just had to plug in the given values in the expression he reached, instead of repeating the calculation and finding the radius. ( No offence intended ) :-)
    – Devashish Kaushik
    Aug 31 at 7:59











  • @DevashishKaushik I get your point but as you can see the rate $r'(t)$ depends upon $r(t)$ therefore we need to find $r(t)$ to solve the problem completely. For example assuming $r(0)=0$ we can explicitely find a value for the rate at $t=28/11 s$.
    – gimusi
    Aug 31 at 8:00











  • Of course, I was referring to the fact that seeing that the OP reached $drover dt = f(R)$ , it might be better to give him a slight hint instead of the succeeding steps in their entirety. I am sorry if it seemed like I was suggesting that your solution was incorrect.
    – Devashish Kaushik
    Aug 31 at 8:22











  • @DevashishKaushik I didn't have that idea about your kind observation. Thanks
    – gimusi
    Aug 31 at 8:29










  • I think $r(0) = r_0$@gimusi
    – cmi
    Aug 31 at 8:46












up vote
1
down vote



accepted







up vote
1
down vote



accepted






Yes your way is correct indeed we have



$$A(t)=pi r(t)^2implies A'(t)=2 pi r(t)r'(t)=2 implies r'(t)=frac1pi r(t)$$



and therefore



$$fracdrdt=frac1pi r implies rdr=frac 1 pi dt implies frac12r^2=frac t pi+C implies r(t)=sqrtfrac2tpi+C$$



and assuming $r(0)=r_0 implies C=r_0^2$ that is




$$r'(t)=frac1sqrt2pi t+pi r_0^2$$







share|cite|improve this answer














Yes your way is correct indeed we have



$$A(t)=pi r(t)^2implies A'(t)=2 pi r(t)r'(t)=2 implies r'(t)=frac1pi r(t)$$



and therefore



$$fracdrdt=frac1pi r implies rdr=frac 1 pi dt implies frac12r^2=frac t pi+C implies r(t)=sqrtfrac2tpi+C$$



and assuming $r(0)=r_0 implies C=r_0^2$ that is




$$r'(t)=frac1sqrt2pi t+pi r_0^2$$








share|cite|improve this answer














share|cite|improve this answer



share|cite|improve this answer








edited Aug 31 at 8:49

























answered Aug 31 at 7:54









gimusi

71.7k73787




71.7k73787











  • @gimsu The OP had asked for increase rate $dr/dt$ of the radius , not the radius itself. It might be norw useful to point out that he just had to plug in the given values in the expression he reached, instead of repeating the calculation and finding the radius. ( No offence intended ) :-)
    – Devashish Kaushik
    Aug 31 at 7:59











  • @DevashishKaushik I get your point but as you can see the rate $r'(t)$ depends upon $r(t)$ therefore we need to find $r(t)$ to solve the problem completely. For example assuming $r(0)=0$ we can explicitely find a value for the rate at $t=28/11 s$.
    – gimusi
    Aug 31 at 8:00











  • Of course, I was referring to the fact that seeing that the OP reached $drover dt = f(R)$ , it might be better to give him a slight hint instead of the succeeding steps in their entirety. I am sorry if it seemed like I was suggesting that your solution was incorrect.
    – Devashish Kaushik
    Aug 31 at 8:22











  • @DevashishKaushik I didn't have that idea about your kind observation. Thanks
    – gimusi
    Aug 31 at 8:29










  • I think $r(0) = r_0$@gimusi
    – cmi
    Aug 31 at 8:46
















  • @gimsu The OP had asked for increase rate $dr/dt$ of the radius , not the radius itself. It might be norw useful to point out that he just had to plug in the given values in the expression he reached, instead of repeating the calculation and finding the radius. ( No offence intended ) :-)
    – Devashish Kaushik
    Aug 31 at 7:59











  • @DevashishKaushik I get your point but as you can see the rate $r'(t)$ depends upon $r(t)$ therefore we need to find $r(t)$ to solve the problem completely. For example assuming $r(0)=0$ we can explicitely find a value for the rate at $t=28/11 s$.
    – gimusi
    Aug 31 at 8:00











  • Of course, I was referring to the fact that seeing that the OP reached $drover dt = f(R)$ , it might be better to give him a slight hint instead of the succeeding steps in their entirety. I am sorry if it seemed like I was suggesting that your solution was incorrect.
    – Devashish Kaushik
    Aug 31 at 8:22











  • @DevashishKaushik I didn't have that idea about your kind observation. Thanks
    – gimusi
    Aug 31 at 8:29










  • I think $r(0) = r_0$@gimusi
    – cmi
    Aug 31 at 8:46















@gimsu The OP had asked for increase rate $dr/dt$ of the radius , not the radius itself. It might be norw useful to point out that he just had to plug in the given values in the expression he reached, instead of repeating the calculation and finding the radius. ( No offence intended ) :-)
– Devashish Kaushik
Aug 31 at 7:59





@gimsu The OP had asked for increase rate $dr/dt$ of the radius , not the radius itself. It might be norw useful to point out that he just had to plug in the given values in the expression he reached, instead of repeating the calculation and finding the radius. ( No offence intended ) :-)
– Devashish Kaushik
Aug 31 at 7:59













@DevashishKaushik I get your point but as you can see the rate $r'(t)$ depends upon $r(t)$ therefore we need to find $r(t)$ to solve the problem completely. For example assuming $r(0)=0$ we can explicitely find a value for the rate at $t=28/11 s$.
– gimusi
Aug 31 at 8:00





@DevashishKaushik I get your point but as you can see the rate $r'(t)$ depends upon $r(t)$ therefore we need to find $r(t)$ to solve the problem completely. For example assuming $r(0)=0$ we can explicitely find a value for the rate at $t=28/11 s$.
– gimusi
Aug 31 at 8:00













Of course, I was referring to the fact that seeing that the OP reached $drover dt = f(R)$ , it might be better to give him a slight hint instead of the succeeding steps in their entirety. I am sorry if it seemed like I was suggesting that your solution was incorrect.
– Devashish Kaushik
Aug 31 at 8:22





Of course, I was referring to the fact that seeing that the OP reached $drover dt = f(R)$ , it might be better to give him a slight hint instead of the succeeding steps in their entirety. I am sorry if it seemed like I was suggesting that your solution was incorrect.
– Devashish Kaushik
Aug 31 at 8:22













@DevashishKaushik I didn't have that idea about your kind observation. Thanks
– gimusi
Aug 31 at 8:29




@DevashishKaushik I didn't have that idea about your kind observation. Thanks
– gimusi
Aug 31 at 8:29












I think $r(0) = r_0$@gimusi
– cmi
Aug 31 at 8:46




I think $r(0) = r_0$@gimusi
– cmi
Aug 31 at 8:46

















 

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