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Double Integrals in Polar Coordinates
Section 16.4 Double Integrals in Polar Coordinates
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POLAR RECTANGLES In polar coordinates, a polar rectangle R has the form R = {(r, θ) : a ≤ r ≤ b, α ≤ θ ≤ β}
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CONVERTING TO POLAR COORDINATES
Partition R into small polar rectangles given by Rij = {(r, θ) | ri − 1 ≤ r ≤ ri, θj − 1 ≤ θ ≤ θj} The area of rectangle Rij is given by where is the average radius of the rectangle. Then the typical Riemann sum is
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CONVERTING TO POLAR COORDINATES
If we write g(r, θ) = r f (r cos θ, r sin θ), then the Riemann sum can be written as which is a Riemann sum for the double integral
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CHANGE TO POLAR COORDINATES IN A DOUBLE INTEGRAL
If f is continuous on the polar rectangle R given by 0 ≤ a ≤ r ≤ b, α ≤ θ ≤ β, where 0 ≤ β − α ≤ 2π, then NOTE: Be careful not to forget the additional factor r on the right side of the formula.
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EXAMPLE Evaluate where R is the region
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D = {(r, θ) | α ≤ θ ≤ β, h1(θ) ≤ r ≤ h2(θ)}.
AN EXTENSION If f is continuous on a polar region of the form D = {(r, θ) | α ≤ θ ≤ β, h1(θ) ≤ r ≤ h2(θ)}. then
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EXAMPLES 1. Use a double integral to find the area enclosed by one leaf of the three-leaved rose r = 3 sin 3θ. 2. Compute where D is the region in the first quadrant that is outside the circle r = 2 and inside the cardiod r = 2 + 2cos θ. 3. Compute the volume of the solid that lies under the hemisphere , above the xy-plane, and inside the cylinder x2 + y2 − 4x = 0.
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